Principles of Judicial Propriety and Co-ordinate Benches: one judge of a High Court cannot sit in appeal over or review the decision of another judge of the same High Court. This case concerns an appeal against a Delhi High Court judgment that dismissed a contempt petition. The underlying dispute arose from a Memorandum of Understanding (MoU) between shareholders of “RBT Private Ltd.,” including Rajan Chadha & Anr. (Appellants) and Sanjay Arora (Respondent), for the transfer of shares and company reorganisation . The Appellants alleged the Respondent failed to honour the MoU, siphoned assets, and defaulted on a term loan. Arbitration proceedings commenced, and an arbitrator directed the Respondent to continue paying loan EMIs to prevent the company’s account from becoming a Non-Performing Asset (NPA). A Local Commissioner’s report indicated asset removal . The Appellants filed a contempt petition in the High Court, alleging non-compliance with both a High Court interim order (11th June 2020) and the arbitrator’s orders (17th June 2020 and 1st July 2020). Crucially, a Single Judge of the High Court, on 5th December 2023, unequivocally held the Respondent “guilty of intentionally and malafidely violating” the orders and thereby “committed contempt of the orders of the Court.” This judge granted the Respondent four weeks to “purge the contempt,” failing which an affidavit regarding punishment was required . Subsequently, due to a change in roster, another Single Judge of the High Court took over the case. On 3rd July 2024, this second Single Judge concluded that there was “no willful and deliberate disobedience” by the Respondent, discharged the show cause notice, and dismissed the contempt petition. The Appellants then appealed this decision to the Supreme Court .
Law Involved The primary legal principles central to the Supreme Court’s decision involved:
Contempt of Courts Act, 1971 (Sections 12, 13, and 19): Specifically, Section 19 provides for an appeal against an order or decision of a High Court in contempt proceedings.
Principles of Judicial Propriety and Co-ordinate Benches: The doctrine that one judge of a High Court cannot sit in appeal over or review the decision of another judge of the same High Court.
Reasoning The Supreme Court chose not to examine the merits of the contempt allegations, instead focusing solely on the “correctness of the procedure adopted by the learned Single Judge of the High Court” in passing the impugned judgment. The Court found that the first Single Judge, on 5th December 2023, had made a clear and definitive finding that the Respondent was “guilty of intentionally and malafidely violating” court orders and “committed contempt”. The subsequent listing was only for the purpose of assessing whether the contempt had been purged or for initiating punishment proceedings…. The Supreme Court ruled that the second Single Judge, by concluding that “no willful and deliberate disobedience” had occurred and dismissing the contempt petition, had effectively “reviewed the entire order” of the first Single Judge. This action was deemed impermissible, as it amounted to “sitting in an appeal over the order passed by the coordinate Bench”. The Court stressed that if the Respondent believed the 5th December 2023 order finding them guilty of contempt was incorrect, the only appropriate legal recourse was to file an appeal under Section 19 of the Contempt of Courts Act, 1971. Such a review by a co-ordinate bench was not only “in excess of the jurisdiction” but also “contrary to the well settled principles of judicial propriety”….
Holding The Supreme Court allowed the appeal. It quashed and set aside the Delhi High Court’s judgment dated 3rd July 2024. The matter was remitted back to the learned Single Judge of the High Court to consider the issue from the stage of the 5th December 2023 order, meaning the subsequent proceedings should focus on whether the Respondent has purged the contempt or why they should not be punished. There was no order as to costs.
Rajan Chadha & Anr. V. Sanjay Arora
Supreme Court: 2025 INSC 546:(DoJ 23-04-2025)




