Vijay Kumar Padalia (appellant) initially filed an application with the National Green Tribunal (NGT) in 2017 to halt the construction of a motor road and prevent tree felling, which he later withdrew with the NGT’s permission to file a more “comprehensive application” after learning of forest clearance. On 09.08.2018, he filed a new application (Original Application No. 522/2018) under Section 14 of the National Green Tribunal Act, 2010 (NGT Act), believing it to be comprehensive. However, the NGT dismissed this application on 24.10.2018, not on its merits, but on the technicality that the order granting sanction should have been challenged via an appeal under Section 16 of the NGT Act, rather than an original application. The appellant challenged this dismissal before the Supreme Court.
Law Involved The judgment primarily involved:
National Green Tribunal Act, 2010 (NGT Act): Specifically, Section 14 (original applications) and Section 16 (appeals).
Limitation Act, 1963: Section 14 (exclusion of time in computing periods of limitation for bona fide proceedings).
Principles of Natural Justice/Procedural Fairness: The Supreme Court highlighted that “technicalities have been overstretched to dismiss and oust the appellant,” leading to a “miscarriage of justice”.
Reasoning The Supreme Court found the NGT’s dismissal “egregiously erroneous” due to a miscarriage of justice. Its reasoning was based on several points:
Overstretched Technicalities: The NGT “overstretched” technicalities by dismissing the application solely on a procedural ground, rather than addressing the merits.
NGT’s Own Directive: The appellant had filed the “comprehensive application” in good faith, in terms of the NGT’s own prior order dated 02.08.2018, which granted him liberty to do so.
Procedural Flexibility: Even if the NGT correctly deemed the matter appealable, it should have allowed the appellant to amend his Original Application or to file a fresh appeal under Section 16, instead of outright dismissal.
Addressing Limitation: The Supreme Court also considered potential limitation issues for the deemed appeal, clarifying that Section 14 of the Limitation Act would apply for exclusion of time due to bona fide proceedings, and that the limitation period would commence from the date of knowledge if the order was never communicated.
No Comment on Merits: The Supreme Court explicitly refrained from commenting on the merits of the case itself, focusing solely on the procedural flaw.
Holding The Supreme Court allowed the appeal, thereby setting aside the NGT’s judgment dated 24.10.2018. The matter was remanded back to the NGT. The Court directed that Original Application No. 522/2018 shall be treated as an appeal under Section 16 of the NGT Act. The appellant was granted liberty to amend this ‘appeal’ to conform to procedural requirements and also to file a separate fresh petition under Section 14 of the NGT Act within three weeks. Both matters are to be heard together by the same Bench expeditiously. The Supreme Court’s interim order dated 07.12.2018 was continued for two months, with the NGT retaining the power to modify or vacate it. The appeal was thus disposed of.
Vijay Kumar Padalia V. State Of Uttarakhand And Others
Supreme Court: 2025 INSC 660: (DoJ 06-05-2025)




