In Bharat Kumar Badlani v. Seema Chaudhary (2026 INSC 606), the Supreme Court of India dealt with a contempt petition alleging willful disobedience of its prior interim order directing the de-sealing of a property. The contempt notice was issued against civic and administrative officials of Jaipur, Rajasthan, who had subsequently demanded a premium/security deposit as a condition for de-sealing. Upon receiving the contempt notice, the contemnors withdrew the improper financial demand, fully de-sealed the property, and tendered an unqualified, unconditional apology to the apex court. A Bench comprising Justice Vikram Nath and Justice Sandeep Mehta accepted the unconditional apology and discharged the contempt notice. However, the Court placed the officials on strict notice that any future negligence or non-compliance with judicial orders would be dealt with utmost severity.
1. Parties and Procedural Background
- Petitioner: Bharat Kumar Badlani.
- Respondents / Contemnors: Seema Chaudhary and other designated civic officials, specifically including the Deputy Commissioner (Vigilance), Nagar Nigam Heritage, Jaipur; the Director-cum-Special Secretary, Local Self Government Department, Jaipur; and the Commissioner, Nagar Nigam Heritage, Jaipur.
- The Core Dispute: The petitioner filed this contempt petition (Diary No. 21438/2026) under the inherent jurisdiction of the Supreme Court within a pending Special Leave Petition (Civil) No. 30588 of 2025.
2. Nature of the Contempt Allegation
- The petitioner alleged that the municipal and state officials committed willful disobedience and contempt of the Supreme Court’s interim order dated January 30, 2026 (passed in I.A. No. 14401 of 2026).
- By virtue of that interim order, the Supreme Court had explicitly directed the administrative authorities to de-seal the subject premises.
- Instead of complying unconditionally, the municipal authorities issued a subsequent demand requiring the petitioner to deposit a premium or security fee as a pre-condition to clear the de-sealing process. The petitioner contended this financial hurdle directly obstructed the execution of the apex court’s mandate.
3. Response and Compliance by the Contemnors
- Following the escalation of the dispute to a formal contempt notice, the respondents shifted their legal stance.
- The contemnors formally withdrew the disputed demand for the premium/security deposit.
- They explicitly acknowledged before the Supreme Court that the financial demand was wholly improper and should never have been raised in the face of a clear judicial directive.
- Full compliance with the January 2026 order was eventually carried out, and the premises were successfully de-sealed.
4. Court’s Analysis and Strict Warning
- Acceptance of Apology: The respondents submitted an unqualified and unconditional apology to the Supreme Court for their initial handling of the de-sealing directive. In light of full compliance being achieved and the apology being tendered, the Court deemed it fit to discharge the contempt notice.
- The Threshold of Judicial Discipline: Authored by Justice Vikram Nath, the Court explicitly noted that accepting the apology does not minimize the gravity of the officials’ initial misconduct.
- Strict Caveat: The Supreme Court placed the administrative and municipal officials on clear, unambiguous notice. The Court warned that any future instances of institutional negligence, delays, or conditional implementation of judicial orders—whether issued by the Supreme Court or any subordinate court—will be viewed with the utmost severity and will not receive any administrative indulgence.
5. Final Conclusion & Order
- Disposal: The Supreme Court accepted the unconditional apologies, discharged the contempt notice, and ordered the contempt petition to be closed and consigned to the record.
- Reservation on Main Merits: The Bench made it clear that the observations recorded in this order are strictly confined to the execution of the interim order under the contempt framework. The order has no binding effect or bearing on the underlying merits of the main Special Leave Petition, which remains actively pending for a regular hearing.
2026 INSC 606
Bharat Kumar Badlani V. Seema Chaudhary (D.O.J. 29.05.2026)




