Imagine Dr. Shrawan Kumar Pathak files a partition suit for his share in the family property, then travels abroad for work. Years later he learns the case is “over” because his advocate signed a compromise, giving away half of what he claimed. He never agreed to it, never signed anything, and was never even asked. Can a lawyer do this? On 1 July 2026, the Supreme Court of India answered clearly: no.
Short answer: Your advocate cannot compromise, settle or surrender your substantive legal rights unless you have expressly authorised it. A compromise decree recorded only on your lawyer's consent, without your own express authorisation, is unsustainable and can be set aside by the court. This is the law laid down in Krishna Kumar Ojha & Ors. v. Jitendra Chaudhary & Ors., 2026 INSC 662 (decided 1 July 2026).
The case arose from Partition Suit No. 128 of 1989 filed at Muzaffarpur, where a party sought a one-fourth share in the ancestral property of Thakur Ojha. A compromise petition was accepted on 22 February 1994 and a compromise decree was drawn up. Nearly 28 years later, in 2022, one of the parties challenged that decree, arguing that he had never signed it and had never authorised his advocate to settle on his behalf.
The Supreme Court agreed. It held that there was no express authorisation by the affected defendant allowing his counsel to sign the compromise for him. Order XXIII Rule 3 of the Code of Civil Procedure (CPC) requires that a compromise be lawful, in writing, and genuinely voluntary. Where the client never authorised the settlement, that “voluntary” element is simply not established, and the decree cannot stand.
Critically, the Court clarified a point that many litigants get wrong: a vakalatnama (the document by which you engage an advocate and give them authority to appear and act in your case) does not, by itself, empower the lawyer to give up your rights through a compromise. Conducting the case is one thing; surrendering the very rights you are fighting for is another. The second needs specific, express authority from you. The Supreme Court set aside the compromise decree and remanded the partition suit for a full trial on merits.
Not every instruction to a lawyer amounts to consent to compromise. The following point toward a valid settlement:
If you discover a compromise decree was passed in your case without your express authorisation, act promptly and methodically:
For a broader understanding of how to assert your rights, seek records and hold institutions accountable, see The RTI Playbook. If your matter also involves a criminal angle, our guide on how to file a bail application explains court procedure in plain language.
No. Following Krishna Kumar Ojha v. Jitendra Chaudhary (2026 INSC 662), an advocate cannot compromise or surrender your substantive legal rights unless you have expressly authorised the settlement. A compromise recorded only on your lawyer's consent, without your express authorisation, is unsustainable and can be challenged.
No. A vakalatnama authorises your advocate to appear and conduct your case. The Supreme Court has clarified that it does not, on its own, authorise the lawyer to give up your rights through a compromise. That requires separate, express and specific authority from you.
File an application before the court that passed the decree, invoking the proviso to Order XXIII Rule 3 CPC. Show that the compromise was not lawful or not voluntary, for example because you never signed or authorised it. The court can then refuse to record the compromise or set aside the decree and try the suit on merits.
You should act as soon as you discover the unauthorised compromise, and explain any delay. In the 2026 INSC 662 case the challenge came nearly 28 years later and still succeeded, because a decree that surrenders rights without consent goes to the root of the case. Do not assume delay alone defeats your claim, but do not sit on your rights either.
Order XXIII Rule 3 of the Code of Civil Procedure allows a court to record a settlement between parties and pass a decree in its terms. But the compromise must be lawful, in writing, and voluntary. If any party did not genuinely and voluntarily agree, the court should not record it as a valid compromise.
Yes. Settling or surrendering a client's rights without authority can amount to professional misconduct. You can file a complaint with the State Bar Council or the Bar Council of India, in addition to moving the court to set aside the decree.