apply-stay-order-injunction-2026
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| + | ====== How to apply for a stay order / injunction — complete 2026 guide ====== | ||
| + | |||
| + | {{ : | ||
| + | |||
| + | {{page> | ||
| + | |||
| + | <WRAP info> | ||
| + | **Quick answer.** A **stay order** or **injunction** is a court direction that **stops** someone from doing an act, or **compels** them to do a specific act. In Indian civil courts, **temporary injunctions** are granted under **Order XXXIX Rules 1 and 2 of the Code of Civil Procedure 1908**; **permanent (perpetual) injunctions** are granted at the end of trial under **§36 to §42 of the Specific Relief Act 1963**. To get one, the applicant must satisfy the **three-fold test** laid down in **Dalpat Kumar v. Prahlad Singh (1992) SC**: (1) **prima facie case**, (2) **balance of convenience** in your favour, (3) **irreparable injury** that cannot be compensated by money. File the suit + injunction application together at the **civil court of jurisdiction** — court fee depends on the value of the subject matter (typically ₹500-₹50, | ||
| + | </ | ||
| + | |||
| + | ===== Pratik' | ||
| + | |||
| + | <WRAP center round box 80%> | ||
| + | //Pratik Joshi, 42, software engineer in Pune. Owns a row-house in a 30-year-old colony. In May 2025, his next-door neighbour started construction of a fourth floor — clearly violating the colony' | ||
| + | |||
| + | > "I noticed the cement mixer on a Sunday morning. By Monday afternoon they had already excavated for the foundation extension. I knew once they poured the slab, removing it would take 5 years of court battle. So I moved fast. I went to a civil lawyer in Pune the same Monday — fee ₹35,000 for the suit + injunction application + first hearing. By Tuesday she had drafted: a civil suit for permanent injunction under §38 of the Specific Relief Act 1963, plus an application for temporary injunction under Order XXXIX Rule 1 + 2 CPC. We attached: the colony' | ||
| + | |||
| + | —Pratik, January 2026 | ||
| + | </ | ||
| + | |||
| + | About **3.3 crore civil cases** are pending in Indian district courts (NJDG data, 2025) — a meaningful share involve property disputes where one party has secured a **temporary injunction** and the case has settled into status quo for years. Speed is the defining advantage in injunction litigation: courts are receptive to applicants who move within days of the threat, and reluctant once the harm has crystallised. | ||
| + | |||
| + | ===== What a stay order / injunction is — and what it isn't ===== | ||
| + | |||
| + | An **injunction** is a court order that either: | ||
| + | |||
| + | * **Restrains** a person from doing an act (" | ||
| + | * **Compels** a person to do a specific act (" | ||
| + | |||
| + | A **stay order** is colloquially used for a court direction that **suspends** the operation of an order, action, or process — e.g., stay of demolition, stay of arrest, stay of recovery, stay of a lower court' | ||
| + | |||
| + | Injunctions in Indian law are governed by: | ||
| + | |||
| + | * **Code of Civil Procedure 1908** — §94 (general powers of the court to grant interim relief), §95 (compensation for injury caused by false injunction), | ||
| + | * **Specific Relief Act 1963** — §36 (kinds of injunctions), | ||
| + | * **Indian Contract Act 1872** — §73 (compensation for breach), §74 (liquidated damages); for contract-related injunctions. | ||
| + | * **BNSS 2023 §163** — replacement for CrPC §144 — preventive police orders restraining apprehended breach of peace; not a civil injunction but functionally similar in urgent public-order matters. | ||
| + | |||
| + | The leading test for grant of temporary injunction is the **three-fold test** from **Dalpat Kumar v. Prahlad Singh (1992) 1 SCC 719** — followed in every civil court in India: | ||
| + | |||
| + | - **Prima facie case** — the applicant must show that there is a **serious question to be tried** and that the case is not frivolous; the applicant has at least an arguable claim on merits. | ||
| + | - **Balance of convenience** — the court weighs the inconvenience to each party. If injunction is denied and applicant succeeds at trial, the harm should be **greater** than the inconvenience to the respondent if injunction is granted and respondent succeeds. | ||
| + | - **Irreparable injury** — the harm to the applicant if injunction is denied must be such that **money damages cannot adequately compensate** — e.g., destruction of a unique property, loss of trade secret, loss of reputation, loss of statutory or fundamental right. | ||
| + | |||
| + | All three must be present. Failure on any one is fatal. | ||
| + | |||
| + | Other key Supreme Court rulings: | ||
| + | |||
| + | * **Gujarat Bottling Co. Ltd. v. Coca Cola Co. (1995)** — added the consideration that the applicant must approach the court with **clean hands**. | ||
| + | * **Wander Ltd. v. Antox India (1990)** — appellate courts generally do not interfere with discretionary grant/ | ||
| + | * **Dorab Cawasji Warden v. Coomi Sorab Warden (1990)** — for **mandatory injunction**, | ||
| + | |||
| + | ===== Types of injunctions ===== | ||
| + | |||
| + | < | ||
| + | +----------------------------------+---------------------------------------+ | ||
| + | | TYPE | WHEN GRANTED + STATUTE | ||
| + | +----------------------------------+---------------------------------------+ | ||
| + | | Temporary Injunction | ||
| + | | (Order XXXIX Rule 1+2 CPC) | preserve status quo until final | | ||
| + | | | judgment. | ||
| + | +----------------------------------+---------------------------------------+ | ||
| + | | Perpetual / Permanent Injunction | At end of suit by final decree; | ||
| + | | (§38 Specific Relief Act 1963) | granted along with judgment. | ||
| + | +----------------------------------+---------------------------------------+ | ||
| + | | Mandatory Injunction | ||
| + | | (§39 Specific Relief Act 1963) | remove encroachment, | ||
| + | | | reinstate employee. | ||
| + | +----------------------------------+---------------------------------------+ | ||
| + | | Prohibitory Injunction | ||
| + | | | apprehended act. | | ||
| + | +----------------------------------+---------------------------------------+ | ||
| + | | Ex-parte Ad-interim Injunction | ||
| + | | (Order XXXIX Rule 3 CPC) | hearing the other side, valid | | ||
| + | | | typically until next hearing. | ||
| + | | | Court must record reasons for ex- | | ||
| + | | | parte order; if granted, applicant | ||
| + | | | must serve respondent within 24 hrs | | ||
| + | | | + file proof of service. | ||
| + | +----------------------------------+---------------------------------------+ | ||
| + | | Interim Stay (Appellate Court) | ||
| + | | | can stay the decree of the lower | | ||
| + | | | court. | ||
| + | +----------------------------------+---------------------------------------+ | ||
| + | | Preventive Order under §163 BNSS | Police/ | ||
| + | | | apprehended breach of public peace — | | ||
| + | | | not a civil injunction but used in | | ||
| + | | | property disputes for status quo. | | ||
| + | +----------------------------------+---------------------------------------+ | ||
| + | </ | ||
| + | |||
| + | ===== Where to apply ===== | ||
| + | |||
| + | * **Civil Court (Junior / Senior Division)** — for ordinary suits up to the pecuniary jurisdiction of the court (varies by State; ₹3 lakh - ₹2 crore typically). Property, contract, tort, IPR. | ||
| + | * **District Court / High Court (Original Side)** — for higher-value suits or specified subject matter. | ||
| + | * **Family Court** — for matrimonial / family-related injunctions (custody, residence, maintenance protection). | ||
| + | * **High Court (Writ Jurisdiction)** — for stay against State orders / quasi-judicial decisions; under Article 226. | ||
| + | * **Specialised Tribunals**: | ||
| + | * **NCLT** — for corporate disputes, oppression and mismanagement (§242 Companies Act 2013). | ||
| + | * **DRT** — for debt recovery + bank-side injunctions (Recovery of Debts Act 1993). | ||
| + | * **RERA Authority** — for real estate disputes (RERA Act 2016 §31, §35). | ||
| + | * **Competition Commission** — for anti-trust matters. | ||
| + | |||
| + | ===== Step-by-step process — temporary injunction (Order XXXIX Rule 1+2 CPC) ===== | ||
| + | |||
| + | ==== Step 1 — Decide if you need an injunction (and how urgently) ==== | ||
| + | |||
| + | Check three things: | ||
| + | |||
| + | - Is there a **threat** of an act that will cause you harm? (vague worry doesn' | ||
| + | - Will the harm be **irreversible** if not stopped? (a slab once poured is hard to remove; a payment once made is hard to recover) | ||
| + | - Do you have **standing** — a clear legal right (ownership, tenancy, contractual right, statutory right) that is being infringed? | ||
| + | |||
| + | If yes to all three — move within **days**, not weeks. Speed is your single biggest leverage. | ||
| + | |||
| + | ==== Step 2 — Engage a civil lawyer ==== | ||
| + | |||
| + | * Civil/ | ||
| + | * Per appearance: ₹3,000 - ₹50,000. | ||
| + | * For commercial/ | ||
| + | * For low-income matters: free legal aid via DLSA / SLSA — see [[: | ||
| + | |||
| + | ==== Step 3 — File the suit + injunction application together ==== | ||
| + | |||
| + | You cannot file an injunction application as a standalone — it must be **incidental to a civil suit**. So you file: | ||
| + | |||
| + | * **Plaint (Suit)** — the main civil case (e.g., for declaration of title, for permanent injunction, for specific performance, | ||
| + | * **Application for Temporary Injunction** under Order XXXIX Rule 1 + 2 CPC. | ||
| + | * **Affidavit** in support of the injunction application. | ||
| + | * **Annexures** — title documents, sanctioned plans, photographs, | ||
| + | |||
| + | Sample structure of injunction application: | ||
| + | |||
| + | < | ||
| + | IN THE COURT OF [Civil Judge Junior / Senior Division] | ||
| + | AT [city] [district] | ||
| + | |||
| + | Civil Suit No. ___ of 2026 | ||
| + | | ||
| + | |||
| + | [Plaintiff name + address] | ||
| + | |||
| + | Versus | ||
| + | |||
| + | [Defendant name + address] | ||
| + | |||
| + | APPLICATION UNDER ORDER XXXIX RULE 1 AND 2 CPC | ||
| + | FOR GRANT OF TEMPORARY INJUNCTION | ||
| + | |||
| + | Most respectfully showeth: | ||
| + | |||
| + | 1. [Brief facts establishing the plaintiff' | ||
| + | | ||
| + | |||
| + | 2. [The plaintiff has a strong PRIMA FACIE case as evident from: | ||
| + | - Annexure A (title deed) | ||
| + | - Annexure B (sanctioned plan) | ||
| + | - Annexure C (RTI reply showing defendant' | ||
| + | | ||
| + | - Annexure D (architect' | ||
| + | ] | ||
| + | |||
| + | 3. [The BALANCE OF CONVENIENCE is in favour of the plaintiff | ||
| + | | ||
| + | - If the injunction is denied and the defendant proceeds, the | ||
| + | | ||
| + | - If the injunction is granted, the defendant only suffers | ||
| + | | ||
| + | ] | ||
| + | |||
| + | 4. [The plaintiff will suffer IRREPARABLE INJURY because: | ||
| + | - Loss of light, air, and ventilation rights — specific to | ||
| + | the property and not compensable by money. | ||
| + | - Diminution of property value with cascading effects on | ||
| + | | ||
| + | - Once construction is complete, courts hesitate to order | ||
| + | | ||
| + | ] | ||
| + | |||
| + | 5. [The plaintiff has approached the court promptly; there is no | ||
| + | delay or laches.] | ||
| + | |||
| + | 6. [Plaintiff is willing to furnish security / undertaking that if | ||
| + | | ||
| + | | ||
| + | |||
| + | PRAYER: | ||
| + | It is therefore most respectfully prayed that this Hon' | ||
| + | Court may be pleased to: | ||
| + | (a) Grant a temporary injunction restraining the defendant, | ||
| + | his agents, servants, contractors, | ||
| + | | ||
| + | | ||
| + | | ||
| + | (b) Grant ex-parte ad-interim injunction in the meantime | ||
| + | | ||
| + | (c) Pass such other orders as this Hon' | ||
| + | |||
| + | PLAINTIFF | ||
| + | Through Counsel | ||
| + | Adv. [Name] | ||
| + | </ | ||
| + | |||
| + | ==== Step 4 — Three-fold test in court ==== | ||
| + | |||
| + | The court hears the application and tests it against **Dalpat Kumar**: | ||
| + | |||
| + | - **Prima facie case** — court does not decide the merits at this stage; only asks whether there is a serious question to be tried. | ||
| + | - **Balance of convenience** — court weighs hardship on both sides. | ||
| + | - **Irreparable injury** — court asks whether money damages would adequately compensate. | ||
| + | |||
| + | If urgency is shown, the court may grant **ex-parte ad-interim injunction** under Order XXXIX Rule 3 — without hearing the defendant. But the rule **mandates**: | ||
| + | |||
| + | * Court must record **reasons in writing** for granting ex-parte order. | ||
| + | * Plaintiff must serve a copy of the order + plaint + application on the defendant within **24 hours** (or as soon as practicable). | ||
| + | * Plaintiff must file an affidavit confirming service in the court. | ||
| + | * The matter must be listed for hearing on a **specified date** for the defendant to appear and contest. | ||
| + | |||
| + | ==== Step 5 — Defendant' | ||
| + | |||
| + | * The defendant files a **counter-affidavit / written statement** (typically within 30 days, extendable). | ||
| + | * The defendant may apply for **vacation** of the ex-parte injunction under Order XXXIX Rule 4. | ||
| + | * Both sides argue on the three-fold test. | ||
| + | * The court hears arguments — typically 1-3 hearings spanning 4-12 weeks. | ||
| + | |||
| + | ==== Step 6 — Order on temporary injunction ==== | ||
| + | |||
| + | * **Granted** — temporary injunction continues till final disposal of the suit, OR for a specified period. | ||
| + | * **Refused** — applicant can appeal under Order XLIII Rule 1(r) CPC to the appellate court. | ||
| + | * **Modified** — court may impose conditions (security, undertaking, | ||
| + | |||
| + | If granted with conditions like security, the plaintiff must furnish the security within the time stipulated. | ||
| + | |||
| + | ==== Step 7 — Trial of the suit ==== | ||
| + | |||
| + | * The full civil suit proceeds — pleadings, framing of issues, examination of witnesses, documentary evidence, arguments. | ||
| + | * Typical duration: **2-7 years** for ordinary suits; longer for complex commercial/ | ||
| + | * The temporary injunction continues throughout. | ||
| + | |||
| + | ==== Step 8 — Final judgment + permanent injunction ==== | ||
| + | |||
| + | At the end of trial, the court delivers judgment: | ||
| + | |||
| + | * **Decree of permanent injunction (§38 SRA)** — if plaintiff wins. Defendant permanently restrained from the act. | ||
| + | * **Mandatory injunction (§39 SRA)** — if positive action needed (demolish, restore, reinstate). The court orders the defendant to do the specific act within a stipulated time. | ||
| + | * **Damages in lieu of injunction (§40 SRA)** — if injunction is impractical, | ||
| + | * **Suit dismissed** — temporary injunction is automatically vacated; defendant may file claim for compensation under §95 CPC for false injunction. | ||
| + | * **Appeal** can be filed by the losing side to the appellate court within 30-90 days. | ||
| + | |||
| + | ===== Sample fee + cost table ===== | ||
| + | |||
| + | < | ||
| + | +-----------------------------------+--------------------------------------+ | ||
| + | | Court fee for civil suit + inj | Ad valorem on suit value (state- | ||
| + | | application | ||
| + | | | value. Delhi: similar slabs. | ||
| + | | | Pure injunction suit (no value): | ||
| + | | | Fixed ₹100-500. Suit for declaration: | ||
| + | | | Higher. | ||
| + | +-----------------------------------+--------------------------------------+ | ||
| + | | Application for temporary inj | Fixed fee ₹50-200 (state-specific). | ||
| + | | (under Order XXXIX) | ||
| + | +-----------------------------------+--------------------------------------+ | ||
| + | | Lawyer fee — drafting + 1st | Junior advocate: ₹15, | ||
| + | | appearance | ||
| + | | | Commercial/ | ||
| + | | | Free legal aid via DLSA: NIL | | ||
| + | +-----------------------------------+--------------------------------------+ | ||
| + | | Per appearance fee (subsequent) | ||
| + | | | seniority + city + court level. | ||
| + | +-----------------------------------+--------------------------------------+ | ||
| + | | Architect / valuer / expert | ||
| + | | affidavit (commonly required) | ||
| + | +-----------------------------------+--------------------------------------+ | ||
| + | | RTI for evidence-gathering | ||
| + | | (sanctioned plans, FSI records) | ||
| + | +-----------------------------------+--------------------------------------+ | ||
| + | | Appeal against grant/ | ||
| + | | of injunction (Order XLIII) | ||
| + | | | ₹15, | ||
| + | +-----------------------------------+--------------------------------------+ | ||
| + | | Compensation for false inj | §95 CPC — capped earlier at ₹50,000; | | ||
| + | | (against losing plaintiff) | ||
| + | +-----------------------------------+--------------------------------------+ | ||
| + | </ | ||
| + | |||
| + | ===== Common reasons injunction is refused ===== | ||
| + | |||
| + | * **Weak prima facie case** — title disputed without good documentary support; plaintiff' | ||
| + | * **No irreparable injury** — the harm can be measured in money and compensated by damages (most commercial / monetary cases). | ||
| + | * **Balance of convenience against** — granting injunction would cause greater hardship to defendant (e.g., stoppage of an entire factory) than the harm to plaintiff. | ||
| + | * **Delay / laches** — plaintiff sat on the right for months/ | ||
| + | * **Status quo not actually being disturbed** — plaintiff is asking court to alter status quo in his favour, not preserve it. | ||
| + | * **Plaintiff has not approached with clean hands** — concealed material facts, filed parallel litigation, made false statements (//Gujarat Bottling Co. v. Coca Cola, 1995 SC//). | ||
| + | * **Adequate alternative remedy** — statutory tribunal exists for the dispute; civil court declines jurisdiction. | ||
| + | * **Suit not maintainable** — limitation has run; jurisdiction is wrong; mandatory pre-litigation steps not exhausted (e.g., notice under §80 CPC for govt; commercial mediation under Commercial Courts Act 2015). | ||
| + | * **Mandatory injunction sought without high standard met** — court demands clear breach + irreparable injury + only-effective-remedy showing for mandatory injunctions (//Dorab Cawasji Warden, 1990 SC//). | ||
| + | * **Public interest against the injunction** — e.g., stopping a public infrastructure project just because one party is affected may be refused if larger public benefit is involved. | ||
| + | |||
| + | ===== If stuck — the escalation ladder ===== | ||
| + | |||
| + | ==== Rung 1 — Vacation application (defendant-side) ==== | ||
| + | |||
| + | If you are a defendant against whom an ex-parte injunction was granted, file an **application for vacation** under Order XXXIX Rule 4 CPC immediately. Show: ex-parte was unjustified, | ||
| + | |||
| + | ==== Rung 2 — Appeal against grant / refusal ==== | ||
| + | |||
| + | * Order XLIII Rule 1(r) CPC — an order granting or refusing temporary injunction is **appealable**. | ||
| + | * Appeal lies to the immediate appellate court (District Court → High Court). | ||
| + | * Filing window: **30 days** from the order. | ||
| + | * The appellate court applies the **Wander Ltd. v. Antox India (1990)** standard — does not reappreciate evidence; only intervenes if the trial court' | ||
| + | |||
| + | ==== Rung 3 — Revision / Article 227 to High Court ==== | ||
| + | |||
| + | If appeal is not available (some interlocutory orders), file a **revision petition** under §115 CPC or invoke the **High Court' | ||
| + | |||
| + | ==== Rung 4 — Special Leave Petition to Supreme Court ==== | ||
| + | |||
| + | For exceptional matters, file an **SLP under Article 136**. The Supreme Court rarely interferes with concurrent findings of fact on injunction; intervention is typically on legal questions or grossly disproportionate orders. | ||
| + | |||
| + | ==== Rung 5 — CPGRAMS (administrative grievance) ==== | ||
| + | |||
| + | * https:// | ||
| + | * Useful for **administrative / procedural** complaints — non-listing of matter, registry' | ||
| + | |||
| + | ==== Rung 6 — Right to Information (RTI) ==== | ||
| + | |||
| + | The **Civil Court / District Court / High Court** is a **public authority** under §2(h) of the RTI Act 2005 for **administrative and procedural** functions. Each High Court has notified PIO rules for the subordinate civil courts. | ||
| + | |||
| + | **RTI helps in injunction cases when:** | ||
| + | |||
| + | * Your suit / injunction application has been pending for weeks without listing — RTI to **PIO at the court** for **next listed date, dealing officer, file movement history**. | ||
| + | * Court order issued but not implemented — RTI to the **bailiff / process serving section** asking date of receipt of execution order, status of service, reasons for delay. | ||
| + | * Certified copy of order delayed — RTI to the **Copying Section** PIO with the application receipt number. | ||
| + | * You want procedural records of a related government action that strengthens your prima facie case — RTI to the **municipal corporation / planning authority / regulator** for sanctioned plans, building permission orders, inspection reports, encroachment removal orders. (This is the most powerful pre-suit use of RTI — the foundation of many successful injunction cases.) | ||
| + | * For property cases — RTI to the **Sub-Registrar' | ||
| + | * For demolition stay matters — RTI to the **Municipal Demolition Cell** for the demolition order, the survey report on which it is based, and the alternative-resettlement plan (if any). | ||
| + | * For commercial injunctions — RTI to the **regulator** (NCLT registry, RERA authority, Competition Commission, NHAI, etc.) for sectoral inspection / show-cause history. | ||
| + | |||
| + | **RTI does NOT help in injunction cases when:** | ||
| + | |||
| + | * You want the court to **grant or expedite the injunction** — RTI cannot direct judicial action. File a mention application through your lawyer for early hearing. | ||
| + | * You want to **challenge a judicial order** — judicial decisions are exempt under §8(1)(b); use appeal/ | ||
| + | * You seek **third-party private financial information** about the defendant — exempt under §8(1)(j); use **interrogatories, | ||
| + | * You want **trade secrets / commercial confidence** of a competitor — exempt under §8(1)(d); rely on the court' | ||
| + | * You want **CCTV footage or call records** held by a private party — RTI does not apply to private parties; only to public authorities. The court can summon these under Order XI / Order XVI CPC. | ||
| + | * You seek to **substitute or amend the suit** — file an amendment application under Order VI Rule 17 CPC; RTI is not a procedural tool. | ||
| + | |||
| + | For the application format, see [[: | ||
| + | |||
| + | ===== FAQs ===== | ||
| + | |||
| + | **Q. Can I get an injunction without filing a full suit?**\\ | ||
| + | Generally **no** — under Order XXXIX CPC, an injunction is an **interlocutory** relief, granted as part of a pending civil suit. You cannot file a standalone injunction application. The exception is **anticipatory injunction** in some High Court rules and writ petitions under Article 226. | ||
| + | |||
| + | **Q. The court granted ex-parte injunction without hearing me. Can I challenge it?**\\ | ||
| + | Yes — file an application under **Order XXXIX Rule 4 CPC** for **vacation of the ex-parte order**, supported by your version of facts and the documents the plaintiff suppressed. Most courts hear vacation applications urgently. You can also appeal under Order XLIII Rule 1(r) within 30 days. | ||
| + | |||
| + | **Q. Does an injunction expire automatically? | ||
| + | A temporary injunction continues till **final disposal of the suit** unless the order specifies a shorter duration. An ex-parte ad-interim injunction is typically valid only **until the next hearing date** (or as the court directs); after hearing the defendant, the court will either confirm, modify, or vacate it. | ||
| + | |||
| + | **Q. The plaintiff filed for an injunction but lost. Can I claim compensation? | ||
| + | Yes — under **§95 CPC** (and §35-A CPC), you can claim compensation for the loss caused by the wrongful injunction. Earlier capped at ₹50,000; the cap was removed in some updates. File the application either in the same suit or by separate proceeding. | ||
| + | |||
| + | **Q. Can an injunction be granted against a government authority? | ||
| + | Yes — but with caveats. Under §80 CPC, you must give a **2-month notice** to the government before filing the suit (except in cases of " | ||
| + | |||
| + | **Q. The defendant violated the injunction. What do I do?**\\ | ||
| + | File a **contempt application** under the **Contempt of Courts Act 1971** + **Order XXXIX Rule 2-A CPC** (attachment of property + civil imprisonment up to 3 months for breach of injunction). The court can also direct the police to enforce the order. | ||
| + | |||
| + | **Q. Can a stay order stop a criminal proceeding? | ||
| + | For criminal cases, the High Court can **quash** the FIR or criminal proceedings under **§528 BNSS** (the inherent power section, replacing CrPC §482). It can also pass a **stay order** on further investigation or trial proceedings while the quashing petition is pending. | ||
| + | |||
| + | **Q. I want to stop my employer from terminating me. Can I get an injunction? | ||
| + | Generally **no** for private employment — courts treat employment contracts as personal-services contracts that cannot be specifically enforced (§14 SRA). Remedy is damages. For **government / statutory employees**, | ||
| + | |||
| + | **Q. The injunction is hurting my business. The plaintiff has no real case. Can I get it vacated quickly? | ||
| + | File an urgent **vacation application** with documentary evidence of the plaintiff' | ||
| + | |||
| + | **Q. Is there a maximum duration for a temporary injunction? | ||
| + | Legally no — but courts increasingly impose conditions: the plaintiff must " | ||
| + | |||
| + | **Q. Can an injunction be granted to stop someone from posting on social media?**\\ | ||
| + | Yes — for **defamation, | ||
| + | |||
| + | ===== Related on RTI Wiki ===== | ||
| + | |||
| + | * [[: | ||
| + | * [[: | ||
| + | * [[: | ||
| + | * [[: | ||
| + | * [[: | ||
| + | * [[: | ||
| + | * [[: | ||
| + | |||
| + | //Last reviewed: 26 April 2026 by RTI Wiki editorial team. Civil-court fee schedules and pecuniary jurisdictions vary by State — verify your State' | ||
| + | |||
| + | {{tag> | ||
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