Citations: 2026 LiveLaw (Cal) 29 to 2026 LiveLaw (Cal) 119'Second Complaint On Same Matrimonial Incident Unsustainable, Abuse Of Process': Calcutta High Court Quashes S.498A IPC CaseCase Title: Asish Bera & Ors. v. State of West Bengal & Anr.Citation: 2026 LiveLaw (Cal) 29Observing that a second criminal proceeding on the “self-same incident” with identical allegations cannot...
Citations: 2026 LiveLaw (Cal) 29 to 2026 LiveLaw (Cal) 119
Case Title: Asish Bera & Ors. v. State of West Bengal & Anr.
Citation: 2026 LiveLaw (Cal) 29
Observing that a second criminal proceeding on the “self-same incident” with identical allegations cannot be sustained and would amount to an abuse of the process of law, the Calcutta High Court has quashed a dowry harassment and attempt to murder case instituted against a husband and his family members.
Justice Chaitali Chatterjee Das held that once an earlier FIR had already been registered regarding the same occurrence, the de-facto complainant could not initiate another complaint before a different forum under Section 156(3) CrPC. The Court found material inconsistencies in the prosecution's case, omnibus and general allegations against the in-laws, and the absence of specific overt acts, concluding that continuation of the proceedings would be unjust.
Case: Swapan Kumar Manna & Ors. Versus State of West Bengal & Ors.
Citation: 2026 LiveLaw (Cal) 30
The Calcutta High Court has held that the West Bengal Board of Secondary Education (WBBSE) cannot withdraw co-education facilities from a school merely to protect the enrolment of a nearby girls' school. The Court quashed the Board's orders, which restricted admission of girl students in Classes V to VIII at Sonamui Co-Education School.
Justice Krishna Rao noted that Sonamui Co-Education School has been a recognised co-educational institution since 6 January 1965 and that no violation of statutory or regulatory conditions by the school was established by the Board.
Case: Sankar Ghosh v The State of West Bengal & Ors.
Citation: 2026 LiveLaw (Cal) 31
The Calcutta High Court has dismissed an intra-court appeal filed by an MLA challenging the refusal of police permission to hold a sit-in demonstration in front of Nabanna, the headquarters of the West Bengal Government.
The Division Bench comprising Chief Justice Sujoy Paul and Justice Partha Sarathi Sen upheld the order of the Single Judge permitting the protest to be held at an alternative location, holding that the right to protest is subject to reasonable restrictions regarding time and place.
Case: RIYA RAY@ ROY & ANR. VS THE STATE OF WEST BENGAL & ANR
Citation: 2026 LiveLaw (Cal) 32
Holding that criminal law cannot be weaponised to settle personal scores in a residential dispute, the Calcutta High Court has quashed an FIR lodged by a woman against her neighbours — a mother and daughter — observing that the case appeared to be a “counterblast” to an earlier complaint and was riddled with delay, inconsistencies, and legal infirmities.
Justice Chaitali Chatterjee Das found that the allegations stemmed from a trivial disagreement over locking the main gate of a residential building but had been exaggerated into serious charges, including attempt to murder, outraging modesty, and robbery. The Court held that continuation of such proceedings would amount to a gross abuse of the process of law.
Case Title: Jogesh Barman @ Doro Barman v. The State of West Bengal
Citation: 2026 LiveLaw (Cal) 33
The Calcutta High Court has set aside the conviction of a man under the Arms Act in a 36-year-old case, holding that the prosecution failed to prove lawful recovery of arms after every independent seizure witness disowned the alleged raid, rendering the alleged recovery “highly doubtful” and the conviction legally unsustainable.
Justice Prasenjit Biswas, allowing the appeal filed by Jogesh Barman @ Doro Barman, ruled that a conviction cannot rest solely on uncorroborated police testimony when all independent witnesses deny participation in the search and seizure. The Court underscored that proof of conscious and lawful recovery is the sine qua non for sustaining offences under the Arms Act, and once seizure witnesses themselves deny witnessing the recovery or preparation of the seizure list, the very foundation of the prosecution collapses.
Case: The Board of Governors, Ghani Khan Choudhury Institute of Engineering & Technology & Ors. Versus Deb Halder & Ors
Citation: 2026 LiveLaw (Cal) 34
A Division Bench of the Calcutta High Court, comprising Justice Tapabrata Chakraborty and Justice Partha Sarathi Chatterjee, has dismissed an appeal filed by the Board of Governors of the Ghani Khan Choudhury Institute of Engineering & Technology, upholding the order of a single Judge that quashed the termination of the Institute's Superintendent, Deb Halder, during his probationary period.
Case: Asraf Ali @ Firoj & Anr. v. State of West Bengal
Citation: 2026 LiveLaw (Cal) 35
The Calcutta High Court, bench of Justice Dr. Ajoy Kumar Mukherjee, has dismissed a criminal revision petition challenging the acceptance of a supplementary chargesheet filed at an advanced stage of trial in an NDPS case, holding that filing of a supplementary chargesheet under Section 173(8) CrPC is permissible where it is based on further investigation disclosing fresh material, even if the trial is nearing completion.
Case Title: Sajal Kanti Roy @ Subrata @ Subho & Anr. v. State of West Bengal
Citation: 2026 LiveLaw (Cal) 36
The Calcutta High Court has upheld the conviction and life sentence of two appellants for the murder of a villager shot inside his home on the eve of Panchayat elections, holding that a spontaneous oral dying declaration made by the victim immediately after being shot, and heard by his family members, constituted reliable and admissible evidence under Sections 6, 7 and 32 of the Indian Evidence Act.
Case: Sk. Morsed Ali & Ors. Versus The State of West Bengal
Citation: 2026 LiveLaw (Cal) 37
The Calcutta High Court has set aside the conviction and life sentence imposed on the appellants in a case relating to the alleged burning death of a married woman, holding that the prosecution failed to establish their culpability beyond a reasonable doubt.
The Division Bench of Justice Rajasekhar Mantha and Justice Ajay Kumar Gupta found serious inconsistencies in the prosecution evidence, unreliable testimony of child witnesses, unexplained investigative lapses, and material omissions in the inquest report, all of which cumulatively rendered the conviction unsustainable.
Case: PABITRA ROY & ORS. VS THE STATE OF WEST BENGAL
Citation: 2026 LiveLaw (Cal) 38
The Calcutta High Court has set aside the conviction of multiple accused under Section 306/34 IPC, holding that the prosecution failed to establish the essential ingredients of abetment of suicide beyond a reasonable doubt.
Justice Chaitali Chatterjee Das noted that although the deceased died by suicide, mere allegations of harassment or branding him a thief were insufficient to attract Section 306 IPC in the absence of clear mens rea, instigation, or a direct act leading the deceased to take his life.
Case Title: Chandan Dhara & Ors. v. State of West Bengal & Ors.
Citation: 2026 LiveLaw (Cal) 39
The Calcutta High Court has directed the West Bengal Police recruitment authorities to publish the marks obtained in the written examination along with the respective categories of candidates shortlisted for the Physical Measurement Test (PMT) and Physical Efficiency Test (PET) in the ongoing recruitment process for Constables.
Justice Saugata Bhattacharya held that non-disclosure of these particulars undermines transparency and may unfairly deprive eligible candidates of participation in subsequent stages of selection.
Calcutta High Court Upholds Life Sentence In Double Murder-Dacoity Case
Case: Krishna Kanta Dhar & Others Vs. The State of West Bengal
Citation: 2026 LiveLaw (Cal) 40
The Calcutta High Court bench of Justice Debangsu Basak and Justice Md. Shabbar Rashidi has dismissed three connected criminal appeals and upheld the conviction and sentence of the appellants for offences of dacoity with murder arising out of the brutal killing of two women at village Kandra, District Burdwan, on 1 October 2011.
The appeals arose from a common judgment of conviction dated 26 April 2018 and order of sentence dated 30 April 2018 passed by the Additional Sessions Judge, Katwa, in Sessions Trial No. 07 of 2012.
Case: Sri Manish Kumar Pandey Versus Union of India and Others
Citation: 2026 LiveLaw (Cal) 41
The Calcutta High Court has dismissed a writ petition challenging the refusal of the Central Government to refer an industrial dispute for adjudication, holding that an industrial dispute raised after an inordinate and unexplained delay cannot be revived merely on the strength of a failure report under Section 12(4) of the Industrial Disputes Act, 1947.
Justice Ajay Kumar Gupta was hearing a challenge to the order dated 28 June 2019 passed by the Ministry of Labour and Employment, Government of India, refusing to refer the petitioner's dispute with Bank of India to the Central Government Industrial Tribunal. The petitioner, a former clerk-cum-accounts clearance staff of Bank of India, sought a direction for reference of the dispute relating to his compulsory retirement from service.
Case: DR. PRADIP KUMAR GHOSH VS THE STATE OF WEST BENGAL & ANR
CitationP 2026 LiveLaw (Cal) 42
The Calcutta High Court has dismissed a criminal revisional application seeking quashing of criminal proceedings relating to the alleged illegal filling up of water bodies and violation of land use laws in connection with a proposed university project at the Ramkrishna Vivekananda Mission campus. Justice Chaitali Chatterjee Das held that the allegations raised disputed questions of fact requiring detailed examination and could not be decided at the threshold under the Court's revisional or inherent jurisdiction.
Case: CHANDESWHWAR SHAW AND ORS. -VS- STATE OF WEST BENGAL AND ORS.
Citation: 2026 LiveLaw (Cal) 43
In a judgment delivered on February 4, 2026, a Division Bench of the Calcutta High Court, comprising Chief Justice Sujoy Paul and Justice Partha Sarathi Sen, dismissed an intra-Court appeal filed by Chandeswhwar Shaw and others challenging the eviction order passed in WPA 15989 of 2024.
The appellants had sought to overturn an order of a Single Bench dated June 20, 2024, which had granted police assistance to the writ petitioner—the Syama Prasad Mookerjee (SMPK) Port Authority—for the removal of unauthorised occupants from land adjacent to the Port, specifically the approach road to the SMPK Centenary Hospital in Kolkata.
Case: SK. ENAMUL HOSSAIN VS THE STATE OF WEST BENGAL
Citation: 2026 LiveLaw (Cal) 44
The Calcutta High Court recently quashed the criminal proceedings against Sk. Enamul Hossain, a daily-wage labourer, in a case registered by Datan Police Station, Paschim Medinipur under Sections 379/411/34 IPC for alleged possession of stolen cash amounting to Rs. 15,96,000/-.
Case: National Insurance Co. Ltd. VERSUS Lirasa Bibi And Anr
Citation: 2026 LiveLaw (Cal) 45
The Calcutta High Court recently ruled that a motor insurance company cannot recover compensation from a vehicle owner without giving them an opportunity to be heard regarding alleged violations of the insurance policy. The judgment was delivered by Justice Biswaroop Chowdhury on February 4, 2026, in F.M.A. 1003 of 2025, involving National Insurance Co. Ltd. vs. Lirasa Bibi & Anr.
Case: THE WEST BENGAL STATE ELECTRICITY DISTRIBUTION COMPANY LIMITED & ORS. VS JYOTISH CHANDRA RICE MILL & ORS.
Citation: 2026 LiveLaw (Cal) 46
The Calcutta High Court has held that the West Bengal State Electricity Distribution Company Ltd. (WBSEDCL) cannot recover a supplemental electricity bill of Rs. 55.8 lakh from Jyotish Chandra Rice Mill.
Case: General Manager, Eastern Railway VERSUS Ajmira Mirja
Citation: 2026 LiveLaw (Cal) 47
The Calcutta High Court has dismissed an appeal by the Eastern Railway challenging a compensation award to the family of a worker who died in a workplace accident. The judgment was delivered by Justice Biswaroop Chowdhury.
The case arose from an accident on December 23, 2006, in which Allarkha Mirja, a worker employed through a contractor, was fatally struck by the 2509 up Bangalore-Guwahati Express near Noadbradhal Railway Station. The deceased sustained serious injuries and died on the spot. The respondent, Ajmira Mirja, wife of the deceased, filed a claim under the Employees' Compensation Act, 1923, seeking compensation as a dependent.
Case: MD. ASHIK MONDAL Vs. UNION OF INDIA & OTHERS
Citation: 2026 LiveLaw (48)
The Calcutta High Court has held that palmar hyperhidrosis (excessive sweating of palms) is not a valid ground to declare a candidate medically unfit for appointment as Constable (G.D.) in the Central Armed Police Forces (CAPFs).
The Court observed that the recruitment authorities failed to demonstrate any specific provision under the applicable medical guidelines which disqualifies a candidate on account of palmar hyperhidrosis.
Case: PRABIR MUKHOPADHYAY @ PRABIR MUKHERJEE VS THE STATE OF WEST BENGAL & ANR.
Citation: 2026 LiveLaw (Cal) 49
The Calcutta High Court has quashed criminal proceedings against a senior retired official of the West Bengal Financial Corporation (WBFC), holding that continuation of the case would amount to a gross abuse of the process of law.
The Court found that the FIR and subsequent charge-sheet, arising out of an alleged incident of trespass, criminal intimidation and outraging modesty, were lodged with an ulterior motive to stall loan recovery proceedings initiated by WBFC.
Case: Jagjit Kumar Versus The State & Others
Citation: 2026 LiveLaw (Cal) 50
“Although we are happy and indeed, rejoicing that our daughters have won the World Cup in Cricket recently… the passing away of Rudrika at the age of one and half years reminds us that still we have to go a long way to achieve complete equality for our girl children,” the Calcutta High Court Circuit Bench at Port Blair observed while setting aside the discharge of a woman's in-laws in a dowry death case and directing that they face trial.
Case Title: Shri Krishna Mohan Das v. State
Citation: 2026 LiveLaw (Cal) 51
Observing that an accused cannot be made to suffer because of a “deficient, casual and cryptic” cross-examination conducted by his previous counsel, the Calcutta High Court (Circuit Bench at Port Blair) has set aside a trial court order refusing to recall prosecution witnesses in a POCSO case and permitted limited re-cross-examination to ensure a fair defence.
Justice Apurba Sinha Ray held that while courts must be cautious about recalling vulnerable witnesses in sexual offence cases, the right of the accused to effectively defend himself cannot be sacrificed, particularly where the earlier cross-examination appears inadequate and may prejudice the defence.
Case Title: State v. M. Hari Krishna
Citation: 2026 LiveLaw (Cal) 52
Reiterating that proof of both demand and acceptance of illegal gratification is sine qua non for conviction under the Prevention of Corruption Act, the Calcutta High Court (Circuit Bench at Port Blair) has upheld the acquittal of a Revenue Officer accused of accepting a ₹5,000 bribe for processing a land mutation application.
Justice Apurba Sinha Ray dismissed the State's appeal against acquittal, observing that the prosecution failed to establish the foundational facts necessary to raise the statutory presumption under Section 20 of the Prevention of Corruption Act. The Court held that mere recovery of tainted money or trap formalities, without credible proof of demand and acceptance, cannot sustain conviction.
Case Title: Bidhi Chand Chowrasia v. State of West Bengal
Citation: 2026 LiveLaw (Cal) 53
Observing that a criminal conviction cannot rest on doubtful stock measurement done with a stick and unsupported by reliable independent witnesses, the Calcutta High Court has set aside the conviction of a petrol pump operator under the Essential Commodities Act, holding that the prosecution failed to prove violation of stock and display requirements beyond a reasonable doubt.
Justice Chaitali Chatterjee Das allowed a criminal appeal filed by Bidhi Chand Chowrasia and overturned the 1992 conviction recorded by a Special Court under Section 7(1)(a)(ii) of the Essential Commodities Act for alleged shortage of high-speed diesel (HSD) stock and non-display of stock and price information.
Case Title: Arnab Paul v. State of West Bengal & Ors.
Citation: 2026 LiveLaw (Cal) 54
Observing that an accused has no right of audience in matters concerning the manner or mode of investigation, the Calcutta High Court has dismissed applications seeking impleadment in a writ petition filed for investigation into alleged police inaction and collusion. The Court held that neither a complainant in a separate FIR nor persons who are merely prospective accused can insist on being added as parties at the investigation stage.
Case Title: Sambhu Das @ Shambhu Das & Ors. v. State of West Bengal & Anr.
Citation: 2026 LiveLaw (Cal) 55
The Calcutta High Court has held that a criminal conviction cannot be sustained on the basis of vague and omnibus allegations without any specific role attributed to the accused, especially where independent witnesses do not support the prosecution and material contradictions exist regarding the manner and place of occurrence.
Allowing a criminal revision petition, Justice Ajay Kumar Gupta set aside the concurrent findings of the Trial Court and the Appellate Court which had convicted a man under Section 323 of the IPC (voluntarily causing hurt), observing that the prosecution failed to establish guilt beyond reasonable doubt or prove any common intention.
Case: Smti. Kishori Bala Das Versus The Andaman and Nicobar Administration and Others
Citation: 2026 LiveLaw (Cal) 56
The Calcutta High Court Circuit Bench at Port Blair has held that a demolition order passed by a municipal authority cannot be directly challenged under Article 226 of the Constitution when an effective statutory appellate remedy is available, observing that the competent officer had passed a reasoned order after granting a hearing to all stakeholders.
Justice Apurba Sinha Ray dismissed a writ petition filed by Smti. Kishori Bala Das challenging a demolition direction issued by the Executive Engineer (Planning), Municipal Council, and granted her liberty to pursue the appellate remedy in accordance with law.
Case Title: Andaman Plantations and Development Corporation Pvt. Ltd. & Anr. v. The Hon'ble Lieutenant Governor & Ors.
Citation: 2026 LiveLaw (Cal) 57
The Calcutta High Court Circuit Bench at Port Blair has set aside an order rejecting tsunami compensation to Andaman Plantations and Development Corporation Pvt. Ltd., holding that relief under the Tsunami Rehabilitation Package cannot be denied merely because the claimant is a company and not an individual farmer. The Court directed the Andaman and Nicobar Administration to reassess and pay admissible compensation in accordance with the applicable policy within twelve weeks.
Justice Apurba Sinha Ray observed that the authorities could not reopen issues that had already been settled by earlier judicial findings, particularly the determination that the petitioner-company's activities were agricultural in nature and that it functioned as a farming enterprise. The Court noted that these findings had been affirmed up to the Division Bench and continued to hold the field.
Case Title: T.R. Rakesh Kumar v. State
Citation: 2026 LiveLaw (Cal) 58
Observing that a criminal conviction under the Prevention of Damage to Public Property Act cannot rest solely on oral testimony when the prosecution fails to seize, produce or otherwise prove the existence of the allegedly damaged property, the Calcutta High Court Circuit Bench at Port Blair has set aside the conviction of a man accused of vandalising equipment at a government hospital and acquitted him of all charges.
Case: SHIBU BARMAN @ KUBAL VS STATE OF WEST BENGAL
Citation: 2026 LiveLaw (Cal) 59
Observing that suspicion, however strong, cannot substitute proof beyond reasonable doubt, the Calcutta High Court has set aside the conviction of a man accused of murdering his wife, holding that the prosecution failed to establish a complete and reliable chain of circumstantial evidence. The Court ruled that the “last seen together” theory by itself is a weak piece of evidence and cannot form the sole basis of conviction, particularly where there are gaps in the timeline and lack of corroboration.
Case Details: Pradip Agarwal & Anr. v. State of West Bengal & Anr.
Citation: 2026 LiveLaw (Cal) 60
The Calcutta High Court has held that the mere pendency or dismissal of civil proceedings over property title does not bar criminal prosecution where serious allegations of forgery, fabrication of public records, and conspiracy are disclosed. Refusing to quash an FIR alleging use of a forged 1963 sale deed to grab land and secure bank loans, the Court observed that questions relating to genuineness of documents and criminal intent must be investigated and cannot be short-circuited under Section 482 CrPC.
Case: ABHIJIT TIE UP (P) LTD AND ORS Vs VIVEK KUMAR STATE OF WB ADDITIONAL CHIEF SECRETARY AND ORS
Citation: 2026 LiveLaw (Cal) 61
Observing that contempt jurisdiction is meant to secure compliance with court orders and not to grant fresh or additional reliefs, the Calcutta High Court has held that once authorities implement a writ direction to mutate names in land records, petitioners cannot seek further corrections such as change in the nature or character of the land through contempt proceedings. The Court emphasised that contempt powers are supervisory and punitive in nature and cannot be used to enlarge the scope of the original judgment.
Case: Sri Sandip Kumar Saha v. Somnath Saha & Ors.
Citation: 2026 LiveLaw (Cal) 62
The Calcutta High Court has held that a final decree in a partition suit cannot be fully executed unless it is duly engrossed on stamped paper upon payment of the requisite stamp duty, observing that compliance with the Stamp Act is a condition precedent for execution. At the same time, the Court clarified that to avoid delay in enforcement, the decree holder may deposit the entire stamp duty for the whole property and subsequently recover proportionate shares from the other co-sharers.
Case: Mahadeb Das @ Manadev Das v. State of West Bengal & Anr.
Citation: 2026 LiveLaw (Cal) 63
The Calcutta High Court has upheld the conviction of a man for voluntarily causing hurt in a 2005 assault case but extended the benefit of probation in view of the passage of time, observing that after two decades and absence of criminal antecedents, sending the accused to jail would serve little purpose. The Court modified the sentence and directed payment of bonds and compensation instead of imprisonment.
Case Title: Shree Garden Resort Pvt. Ltd. & Anr. v. State of West Bengal & Ors.
Citation: 2026 LiveLaw (Cal) 64
Emphasising that land acquired for “employment generation and socio-economic development” cannot be invalidated merely because the implementing agency changes, the Calcutta High Court has held that acquisition for setting up an industrial park constitutes a clear “public purpose” under the Land Acquisition Act, 1894, and cannot be attacked as acquisition for a private company simply because the land is later leased to an industrial unit.
Case: The Director of Technical Education and Training Versus Lila Lohar & Ors.
Citation: 2026 LiveLaw (Cal) 65
The Calcutta High Court has dismissed a batch of appeals filed by the State of West Bengal and the Director of Technical Education and Training challenging orders that granted permanent government employee status and full Group-D service benefits to hostel/mess employees working in Government and Sponsored Polytechnics.
A Division Bench of Justice Tapabrata Chakraborty and Justice Partha Sarathi Chatterjee held that the issue is no longer res integra, observing that earlier Division Bench rulings extending similar benefits had already been affirmed by the Supreme Court and therefore there was no justification to reopen the controversy.
Case: Parraj Automobiles Private Limited – Versus – Mr. Samiran Sinha
Citation: 2026 LiveLaw (Cal) 66
The Calcutta High Court has reiterated that a post-employment non-compete clause restraining an employee from joining a competitor after resignation is prima facie void under Section 27 of the Indian Contract Act, but clarified that confidentiality obligations and non-solicitation covenants aimed at protecting trade secrets and business interests remain enforceable.
Case Title: Hemant Kanoria & Anr. v. Indian Overseas Bank
Citation: 2026 LiveLaw (Cal) 67
The Calcutta High Court has held that a bank cannot proceed to classify a borrower's account as “fraud” without first supplying the forensic audit report and the documents relied upon in the show cause notice, observing that principles of natural justice cannot be sacrificed in the name of expedition under the Reserve Bank of India's Master Directions.
Justice Krishna Rao set aside Indian Overseas Bank's decision declaring the petitioners' account as fraud, noting that an effective opportunity to respond is illusory unless the material forming the basis of the allegations is disclosed.
Case Title: Enforcement Directorate & Anr. v. Sri Suman Chattopadhyay & Ors.
Citation: 2026 LiveLaew (Cal) 68
The Calcutta High Court has held that once a provisional attachment under the Prevention of Money Laundering Act (PMLA) stands confirmed by the Adjudicating Authority and statutory appeals are pending before the Appellate Tribunal, a parallel writ challenge becomes academic and should not be entertained.
Setting aside a Single Judge's order quashing the Enforcement Directorate's (ED) provisional attachment, a Division Bench of Justice Rajarshi Bharadwaj and Justice Uday Kumar emphasised that writ courts must exercise restraint where the statute provides a complete adjudicatory mechanism.
Case: Pradyut Samanta v. State of West Bengal & Anr.
Citation: 2026 LiveLaw (Cal) 69
The Calcutta High Court has reiterated that mere non-payment of business dues or breach of contractual obligations cannot be dressed up as offences of cheating or criminal breach of trust, and that criminal proceedings cannot be used as a pressure tactic for recovery of money. Quashing an FIR against a small poultry feed trader, the Court held that in the absence of dishonest intention at the inception of the transaction, offences under Sections 406 and 420 IPC are not made out.
Case: Ram Babu Yadav Vs. Union of India & Ors.
Citation: 2026 LiveLaw (Cal) 70
The Calcutta High Court has set aside the Eastern Railway's decision cancelling a parcel leaseholder's registration, terminating his contracts, forfeiting deposits and debarring him for five years, holding that preparation of separate manifests for two unloading terminals does not amount to a “false declaration” or fraud in the absence of proof of mens rea or loss to the Railways. The Court observed that blacklisting has drastic civil consequences and cannot be imposed mechanically for operational or clerical discrepancies.
Case Title: Magma HDI General Insurance Co. Ltd. v. Tarun Majumder & Ors. with cross-objection Tarun Majumder & Anr. v. Magma HDI General Insurance Co. Ltd. & Anr.
Citation: 2026 LiveLaw (Cal) 71
The Calcutta High Court has enhanced compensation payable to the family of a woman who died in a road accident to ₹69.10 lakh after reassessing her annual income and adding future prospects, while simultaneously reducing the interest rate from 7.5% to 6% per annum. The Court held that cash compensatory allowance forming part of the deceased's earnings ought to be reasonably factored into the income calculation for determining just compensation under the Motor Vehicles Act.
Case Title: Uttam Mondal v. State of West Bengal & Anr.
Citation: 2026 LiveLaw (Cal) 72
The Calcutta High Court has refused to quash criminal proceedings against a man accused of stalking, assault, attempting to outrage a woman's modesty and criminal intimidation, observing that once charges have been framed and trial has progressed, the High Court must exercise its inherent powers under Section 482 CrPC with extreme caution and only in the “rarest of rare cases.” The Court held that disputed facts and sufficiency of evidence cannot be examined in a quashing petition.
Case: Narayan Chandra Gorai Versus The State of West Bengal & Another
Citation: 2026 LiveLaw (Cal) 73
The Calcutta High Court has set aside the conviction of a mustard oil mill co-owner in a decades-old food adulteration case, holding that doubtful seizure proceedings and inconsistent laboratory reports strike at the root of the prosecution's case and make conviction unsafe. The Court reiterated that when material discrepancies arise in expert evidence and seizure is not properly proved, the benefit of doubt must go to the accused.
Case: Md. Amjad @ Md. Amzad @ Amjed v. State of West Bengal & Ors.,
Citation: 2026 LiveLaw (Cal) 74
The Calcutta High Court has held that while the State Government must obtain the opinion of the presiding judge of the convicting or confirming court before deciding a life convict's application for remission or premature release under Section 432(2) of the Code of Criminal Procedure, such opinion must be reasoned, informed and based on relevant factors, and cannot be mechanically accepted as conclusive. Setting aside the West Bengal Government's rejection of a life convict's premature release solely on the basis of an adverse judicial opinion, the Court directed the Chief Judge, City Sessions Court, Kolkata, to furnish a fresh, legally compliant opinion and asked the State to reconsider the case thereafter.
Case: Moumita Bhattacharya v. State of West Bengal & Anr.
Citation: 2026 LiveLaw (Cal) 75
The Calcutta High Court has held that professional disagreements, administrative disputes or alleged workplace humiliation cannot automatically attract offences under the Scheduled Castes and Scheduled Tribes (Prevention of Atrocities) Act unless there is clear, caste-based insult or intimidation in public view. Quashing criminal proceedings against a Sanskrit professor, the Court observed that “not every intentional insult” to a member of the Scheduled Caste community amounts to an atrocity under Section 3(1)(r) of the Act.
Case Name : P.K. Chattopadhyay vs. Union of India & Ors.
Citation: 2026 LiveLaw (Cal) 76
A Division Bench of the Calcutta High Court comprising Chief Justice Sujoy Paul and Justice Partha Sarathi Sen held that a senior government employee is entitled to stepping up of pay at par with a junior if both are in the same cadre, same post, and same pay scale, and the junior is drawing higher pay, and earlier higher pay in an ex-cadre post cannot justify permanent pay disparity.
Case Title: M/s Heinen & Hopman Engineering (I) Pvt. Ltd. v. State of West Bengal & Ors.
Citation: 2026 LiveLaw (Cal) 77
The High Court at Calcutta has held that pension payable under an employer's superannuation trust can fall within the definition of “wages” under the Payment of Wages Act, and that employees who resign after completing the prescribed years of qualifying service cannot be denied pension merely because they did not retire on superannuation.
A Division Bench of Justices Lanusungkum Jamir and Rai Chattopadhyay dismissed four intra-court appeals filed by Heinen & Hopman Engineering (I) Pvt. Ltd., affirming a Single Judge's decision which had upheld the jurisdiction of the authority under the West Bengal Shops and Establishments Act to entertain employees' claims for pension through Form-N proceedings.
Case: Anirban Mukherjee v. State of West Bengal & Anr.
Citation: 2026 LiveLaw (Cal) 78
Holding that a prolonged consensual relationship between two adults cannot later be converted into a rape prosecution merely because the relationship soured or marriage did not materialise, the High Court at Calcutta has quashed criminal proceedings under Sections 417, 376, 313 and 506 IPC against a man accused of sexual assault and forced abortion on the pretext of marriage. The Court observed that for a promise to marry to vitiate consent, the promise must be false from the very inception, and not a subsequent breach arising out of a failed relationship.
Case: West Bengal Power Development Corporation Ltd. v. Union of India & Anr.
Citation: 2026 LiveLaw (Cal) 79
The Calcutta High Court has held that graduate trainees receiving only stipends cannot automatically be treated as “employees” for the purpose of provident fund contributions. At the same time, the Court upheld PF liability in respect of security personnel and fire-fighting staff directly engaged and paid by the principal establishment, observing that their wages clearly attracted statutory deductions.
Case: Dr. Tripti Das & Anr. v. Dr. Phani Bhusan Mandal & Ors.
Citation: 2026 LiveLaw (Cal) 80
The Calcutta High Court has clarified that orders passed by the National Consumer Disputes Redressal Commission (NCDRC) cannot be routinely challenged through a writ petition under Article 226 of the Constitution when the dispute is purely between private parties, holding that the proper remedy in such cases lies under Article 227.
Justice Om Narayan Rai ruled that although NCDRC orders are amenable to High Court scrutiny, the nature of jurisdiction depends on the parties involved and the character of the dispute. Where no State authority or public law element is present, the Court said, Article 226 cannot be invoked merely because the order emanates from a statutory tribunal.
Case: Mamta Binani & Anr. v. Kolkata Municipal Corporation & Ors.
Citation: 2026 LiveLaw (Cal) 81
The Calcutta High Court has held that municipal authorities cannot retrospectively revalue property or saddle an auction purchaser with property tax dues relating to a period when the purchaser was not the owner, particularly when the property formed part of liquidation proceedings.
Allowing a writ petition against the Kolkata Municipal Corporation (KMC), Justice Rai Chattopadhyay ruled that municipal dues constitute “operational debt” under the IBC and must be claimed before the liquidator and satisfied strictly in accordance with the waterfall mechanism under Section 53 of the Code, and cannot be independently enforced against a subsequent purchaser.
Case Title: Abdul Rashid Khan v. State of West Bengal & Ors.
Ciation: 2026 LiveLaw (Cal) 82
The Calcutta High Court has reiterated that a writ of mandamus cannot be issued directing the police to register an FIR or initiate criminal proceedings, particularly in cases arising out of private land or property disputes, holding that aggrieved persons must first avail statutory remedies provided under criminal law before invoking writ jurisdiction.
A Division Bench comprising Chief Justice Sujoy Paul and Justice Partha Sarathi Sen dismissed an intra-court appeal filed by Abdul Rashid Khan challenging the refusal of the Single Judge to direct police action on his complaint against private parties in a long-standing land dispute.
Case: In the matter of : Vijay Prakash Goel
Citation: 2026 LiveLaw (Cal) 83
The Calcutta High Court has granted bail to a senior citizen and licensed medical shop owner arrested under the Narcotic Drugs and Psychotropic Substances Act after recovery of codeine-based cough syrup and Tramadol capsules from his store, holding that mere seizure of such medicines, without material showing illegal procurement, illegal sale, or violation of any statutory ceiling on storage, is insufficient to justify continued detention under the stringent rigours of the NDPS law.
Case Title: The Chairman and Managing Director, Bank of Baroda & Ors. v. Sri Jyotirmoy Basu & Anr.
Citation: 2026 LiveLaw (Cal) 84
Holding that mere recovery of bank stamps, blank passbooks and letterheads from an employee's residence, without proof of any actual prejudice to the bank, cannot amount to “acts prejudicial to the interest of the bank”, the Calcutta High Court dismissed an intra-court appeal filed by Bank of Baroda and upheld reinstatement of a dismissed workman with full back wages.
A Division Bench of Justice Lanusungkum Jamir and Justice Rai Chattopadhyay refused to interfere with a Single Judge's order which had set aside the Labour Tribunal's grant of lump-sum compensation and instead directed reinstatement with consequential benefits.
Case Title: Siddharth Sethia & Ors. v. State of West Bengal & Anr.
Citation: 2026 LiveLaw (Cal) 85
Holding that the collapse of a joint real estate development arrangement cannot automatically attract criminal prosecution, the Calcutta High Court has ruled that disputes arising out of non-performance of contractual obligations are essentially civil in nature and cannot be given a “criminal colour” in the absence of dishonest intention from the very inception.
Observing that “to constitute cheating, there must be deception coupled with fraudulent or dishonest inducement at the inception of the transaction,” the Court cautioned that criminal law must not be used as a pressure tactic to settle commercial claims.
Case Title: M/s. Tata Capital Finance Ltd. & Ors. v. State of West Bengal & Anr.
Citation: 2026 LiveLaw (Cal) 86
Observing that a dispute arising out of foreclosure charges and alleged excess recovery under a loan agreement is essentially contractual in nature and cannot be converted into a criminal prosecution for cheating or criminal breach of trust, the Calcutta High Court has quashed criminal proceedings initiated against Tata Capital Finance Ltd. and its officials. The Court held that even an alleged violation of regulatory or RBI guidelines would not, by itself, attract penal consequences under Sections 420 or 406 IPC in the absence of fraudulent intent or entrustment.
Case Title: Debanjan Hazra v. Serious Fraud Investigation Office & Ors.
Citation: 2026 LiveLaw (Cal) 87
Refusing to interfere with a Look Out Circular (LOC) issued in connection with a large-scale corporate fraud investigation, the Calcutta High Court held that when an individual has permanently settled abroad, failed to respond to summons and there exists a real apprehension of evasion of prosecution, the investigating agency is justified in preventing departure from India. The Court observed that in such circumstances, the LOC cannot be termed arbitrary or illegal, particularly when “economic interests of India” are involved and prosecution under the Companies Act may soon follow.
Justice Krishna Rao dismissed a writ petition filed by Debanjan Hazra challenging an LOC issued by the Serious Fraud Investigation Office (SFIO) in the ongoing investigation into the affairs of Elder Pharmaceuticals Limited.
Case: Government of West Bengal v. Shiladitya Banerjee & Ors.
Citation: 2026 LiveLaw (Cal) 88
The Calcutta High Court has held that a land acquisition award, which is treated as a decree by legal fiction, can be executed through multiple execution petitions until the entire decretal amount is realised, and that such execution proceedings are not barred by Section 38 of the Code of Civil Procedure since the award is not a decree actually passed by a civil court.
A Division Bench comprising Justice Debangsu Basak and Justice Md. Shabbar Rashidi dismissed an appeal filed by the Government of West Bengal challenging the maintainability of a second execution petition initiated by landowners to recover enhanced compensation arising out of acquisition proceedings.
Case Title: Bishnupada Choudhury & Ors. v. State of West Bengal
Citation: 2026 LiveLaw (Cal) 89
The Calcutta High Court has set aside the conviction of several persons in a nearly four-decade-old culpable homicide case, holding that the prosecution failed to prove its case beyond a reasonable doubt as the evidence of related eyewitnesses was riddled with contradictions, their conduct appeared wholly unnatural, the very genesis of the FIR was doubtful, and the investigation suffered from serious lapses.
Case Name : Kalipada Majumdar & Ors. Vs. Union of India & Ors.
Citation: 2026 LiveLaw (Cal) 90
A Division Bench of the Calcutta High Court comprising Chief Justice Sujoy Paul and Justice Partha Sarathi Sen held that movement from the post of Chowkidar/ General Mazdoor to Motor Pump Attendant (MPA)/Fitter General Mechanic (FGM) after clearing a trade test amounts to promotion and not reclassification, hence employees who have already been promoted are not entitled to benefits of second ACP.
Case: Raja Shah & Ors. v. Kowshik Show & Ors.
Citation: 2026 LiveLaw (Cal) 91
The Calcutta High Court has reiterated that probate proceedings are concerned only with the genuineness of a will and not with the fairness of distribution among heirs, holding that mere delay in seeking probate or unequal bequests cannot, by themselves, amount to suspicious circumstances. Emphasising that courts must respect the last wishes of a testator once due execution and attestation are proved, the Court refused to interfere with a decree granting probate of a decades-old will.
Case: Tithi Adhikary v. State of West Bengal & Ors.
Citation: 2026 LiveLaw (Cal) 92
The Calcutta High Court has held that a purely contractual employee cannot claim continuation or renewal of service as a matter of right after expiry of the contractual term, and that a Minister cannot bypass statutory procedure to appoint an individual in the secretariat without a sanctioned post or recruitment process. Observing that such backdoor engagement amounts to misuse of public office and funds, the Court dismissed a writ petition seeking reinstatement.
Case: Eastern Coalfields Limited v. Union of India & Ors.
Citation: 2026 LiveLaw (Cal) 93
Holding that an employer cannot defeat a dependent's claim for compassionate appointment by sitting over the matter for decades and then raising an age bar, the Calcutta High Court refused to interfere with an Industrial Tribunal award directing employment to the son of a deceased coal worker. The Court observed that keeping a dependent waiting for nearly 30 years without either granting or rejecting his claim was arbitrary and contrary to the duties of a “model employer”.
Case: Nirmal Chandra Biswas v. State of West Bengal & Ors.
Citation: 2026 LiveLaw (Cal) 94
The Calcutta High Court has held that recruiting authorities cannot introduce qualifying or cut-off marks for interview after commencement of the selection process, and once such illegality is struck down in respect of one candidate, other similarly placed candidates must ordinarily be granted the same benefit to avoid discrimination under Article 14.
A Division Bench comprising Justice Madhuresh Prasad and Justice Prasenjit Biswas directed the West Bengal Public Service Commission to recommend the petitioner's name for appointment to the post of Krishi Prayukti Sahayak, noting that he had secured higher aggregate marks than the last selected candidate in his category and was denied recommendation solely due to an illegally introduced interview cut-off.
Case: SUBRATA NUNDY VS. THE COLLECTOR OF KOLKATA, STAMP AND REVENUE, OFFICE OF THE COLLECTOR & ORS.
Citation: 2026 LiveLaw (Cal) 95
The Calcutta High Court has held that a final decree passed in a partition suit, which conclusively determines the shares of the parties and incorporates a commissioner's partition plan, constitutes an “instrument of partition” under the Indian Stamp Act, 1899 and is therefore liable to stamp duty, even where physical division of the property by metes and bounds is not feasible. The Court clarified that stamp duty is attracted by the legal effect of the decree and not by the actual feasibility of physical partition.
Case: Smt. Swapna Bhattacharjee & Anr. VERSUS The New India Assurance Company Ltd. & Anr.
Citation: 2026 LiveLaw (Cal) 96
The Calcutta High Court has enhanced the compensation awarded to the family of a bus accident victim, holding that while computing income for motor accident claims, only statutory deductions like income tax or professional tax can be excluded and not savings such as GPF or group insurance contributions. The Court observed that such contributions are deferred benefits payable back to the employee and therefore must form part of the deceased's income for determining “just compensation.”
Case: Rani Bibi Vs. Sk. Nurullah & Ors.
Citation: 2026 LiveLaw (Cal) 97
The Calcutta High Court has held that a woman who takes refuge in a rented accommodation after being driven out of her matrimonial home can invoke the jurisdiction of the court within whose limits she is temporarily residing, and that continuing economic deprivation by the husband constitutes a recurring cause of action under the Protection of Women from Domestic Violence Act, 2005. Setting aside a Sessions Court order that had returned the wife's complaint on territorial grounds, the Court emphasised that the DV Act is a beneficial legislation and must be interpreted liberally to advance remedies for aggrieved women rather than defeated on technicalities.
Case: Pushpa Sharma Versus The State of West Bengal & Ors.
Citation: 2026 LiveLaw (Cal) 98
Holding that the Maintenance Tribunal under the Maintenance and Welfare of Parents and Senior Citizens Act, 2007 has no jurisdiction to direct eviction of children from property in proceedings under Sections 4 and 5 of the Act, the Calcutta High Court has ruled that the Tribunal's powers are confined to granting monthly maintenance and cannot be stretched to order vacating of premises.
Justice Krishna Rao partly modified orders passed by the Sub-Divisional Officer (acting as the Maintenance Tribunal), setting aside the direction requiring a son to vacate his mother's house, while upholding the maintenance component. The Court also clarified that orders of the Maintenance Tribunal are amenable to challenge under Article 226 of the Constitution since the Tribunal performs quasi-judicial functions.
Case: Aimuddin Sheikh & Anr. Versus The State of West Bengal
Citation: 2026 LiveLaw (Cal) 99
The Calcutta High Court has converted the conviction of two brothers from murder to culpable homicide not amounting to murder, holding that a fatal assault arising out of a sudden family quarrel over responsibility for maintaining aged parents lacked premeditation and therefore did not attract Section 302 of the IPC.
A Division Bench comprising Justice Rajasekhar Mantha and Justice Ajay Kumar Gupta partly allowed the appeal filed by Aimuddin Sheikh and another against their life sentence imposed by the trial court in Nadia.
Case: Ashok Tripathy -Vs- Union of India & Ors.
Citation: 2026 LiveLaw (Cal) 100
Holding that the State cannot resurrect decades-old service decisions to penalise a blameless employee on the eve of retirement, the Calcutta High Court quashed a show-cause notice and recovery proceedings initiated against a Hindi Translator nearly 19 years after his financial upgradations and pay fixations had been repeatedly approved and acted upon.
Justice Ananya Bandyopadhyay observed that “public administration is not a shifting desert where the sands of legality rearrange to suit administrative whims,” adding that when the State sleeps over its powers for decades, it forfeits the right to disturb the financial repose of an employee who neither misrepresented nor committed fraud. The Court emphasised that recovery of alleged excess payments after prolonged delay, particularly from a retired or soon-to-retire Group-C employee, is “iniquitous, arbitrary and constitutionally unconscionable.”
Case: Batliboi Environmental Engineering Limited Vs Eastern Metec Private Limited
Citation: 2026 LiveLaw (Cal) 101
Holding that the Code of Civil Procedure does not prohibit a defendant from filing an additional written statement or counterclaim with the leave of the court even after an earlier written statement has been submitted, the Calcutta High Court refused to interfere with an order of the Commercial Court accepting a fresh written statement along with a counterclaim after transfer of the suit.
Justice Shampa Dutt (Paul) observed that subsequent pleadings are legally permissible under Order VIII Rules 6A, 8 and 9 of the CPC, and once the trial court grants leave, such filings cannot be termed illegal or without jurisdiction.
Case: National Insurance Co. Ltd. VERSUS Sandhya Keora And Ors
Citation: 2026 LiveLaw (Cal) 102
Observing that families of accident victims are naturally preoccupied with treatment, death and last rites rather than immediately approaching the police, the Calcutta High Court held that mere delay in lodging an FIR cannot defeat a genuine motor accident compensation claim. The Court further ruled that an insurer cannot escape liability or seek “pay and recovery” unless it strictly proves breach of policy conditions after conducting a proper enquiry and giving the vehicle owner an opportunity of hearing.
Case: Arko Deep Saha @ Arkadeep Saha -Vs- State of West Bengal & Anr.
Citation: 2026 LiveLaw (Cal) 103
The Calcutta High Court has quashed criminal proceedings against a Skilled Technical Person implicated in an alleged MGNREGS fund misappropriation case, holding that “entrustment is the lifeblood of an offence under Section 409 IPC” and that criminal liability cannot be fastened merely on the basis of official designation without proof of dominion over funds or a document-linked overt act.
Case: Ashis Kumar Dutta & Anr. -Vs- State of West Bengal & Ors.
Citation: 2026 LiveLaw (Cal) 104
The Calcutta High Court has partly quashed criminal proceedings in a matrimonial cruelty case, drawing a clear line between specific allegations against a spouse and vague, omnibus accusations against extended family members, and reiterating that courts must prevent the criminal process from being used for “wholesale implication” of relatives.
Case: Regional Provident Fund Commissioner and another Vs. Employees Provident Fund Appellate Tribunal, Ministry of Labour & Employment Government of India & Ors.
Citation: 2026 LiveLaw (Cal) 105
The Calcutta High Court has upheld an order of the Employees Provident Fund Appellate Tribunal setting aside provident fund dues assessed against a private company, ruling that trainee medical representatives engaged as apprentices under the Model Standing Orders cannot be treated as “employees” for the purpose of provident fund contributions under the EPF Act.
Justice Shampa Dutt dismissed a writ petition filed by the Regional Provident Fund Commissioner and other EPFO authorities challenging the Tribunal's 2011 order in favour of M/s. Klar Sehen Pvt. Ltd., which had quashed a demand of ₹18.74 lakh raised under Section 7A of the Employees' Provident Fund Organisation framework.
Case: Sanjay Agarwal & Ors. Vs. Rita Deb
Citation: 2026 LiveLaw (Cal) 106
The Calcutta High Court has upheld concurrent eviction decrees passed in favour of a landlord, reiterating that a registered ejectment notice returned with the postal endorsement “not claimed” amounts to valid service, and that a reasonably foreseeable future requirement of the landlord constitutes bona fide need under the rent control law.
Dismissing the second appeal, Justice Sugato Majumdar held that courts must assess the reasonableness of the claim and not insist on an immediate or existing necessity, observing that a genuine, foreseeable requirement cannot be defeated merely because it arises in the near future.
Case: AVIJIT SINGHA ROY VS THE STATE OF WEST BENGAL & ANR.
Citation: 2026 LiveLaw (Cal) 107
Observing that criminal law cannot be used as a pressure tactic in what is essentially a family property dispute, the Calcutta High Court has quashed defamation, insult and intimidation proceedings initiated against a private company executive, holding that the complaint did not disclose the basic ingredients of offences under the IPC.
Justice Chaitali Chatterjee Das held that the allegations were vague, lacked particulars of date, time or specific words, and failed to establish any criminal intent.
Case: Ashis Kumar Kulovi -Vs- The State of West Bengal
Citation: 2026 LiveLaw (Cal) 108
Holding that sending a man to jail more than four decades after the alleged offence would serve no meaningful purpose, the Calcutta High Court released an Essential Commodities Act convict on probation while upholding his conviction.
Justice Ananya Bandyopadhyay observed that requiring the appellant to undergo imprisonment at this stage, nearly 42 years after the incident, would not be “expedient in the interest of justice”, and that the ends of justice would be better served by extending the benefit of the Probation of Offenders Act.
Case: M/S. RAHAMAN CONSTRUCTION AND ANOTHER -VERSUS- THE STATE OF WEST BENGAL AND OTHERS
Citation: 2026 LiveLaw (Cal) 109
Observing that blacklisting of a contractor has serious civil consequences and must strictly follow the prescribed statutory procedure, the Calcutta High Court set aside a six-month debarment imposed by a Panchayat Samiti, holding that the action was taken in breach of both the Standard Bid Document and principles of natural justice.
Justice Kausik Chanda ruled that the multi-stage mechanism for debarment under West Bengal Form No. 2911 is “sequential and cannot be bypassed,” and that the Panchayat Samiti lacked jurisdiction to directly blacklist the contractor.
Case: CHANDRA DAS & ORS. VS KAMAL MITRA
Citation: 2026 LiveLaw (Cal) 110
The Calcutta High Court has refused to grant probate of a 2001 Will in a contentious family dispute, holding that the propounder failed to prove its due execution in the manner mandated under Section 63 of the Indian Succession Act and Section 68 of the Evidence Act.
Delivering judgment in a testamentary suit, Justice Sugato Majumdar observed that when suspicious circumstances surround the execution of a Will, the burden on the propounder becomes heavier and must be discharged through clear, cogent and reliable evidence. The Court held that contradictory testimony of the sole attesting witness and failure to examine the second attesting witness were fatal to the probate claim.
Case: Gobinda Middya & Ors. Vs. Sudhir Kumar Dey & Ors
Citation: 2026 LiveLaw (Cal) 111
The Calcutta High Court has reaffirmed that debutter property vested in a deity enjoys strong legal protection and that a plea of adverse possession cannot succeed unless hostile title is clearly asserted against the deity as the true owner.
Dismissing a second appeal in a decades-old property dispute, Justice Sugato Majumdar held that permissive occupation of a tank dedicated to a deity could not ripen into ownership merely by long possession, particularly when the defendants failed to establish any overt act denying the deity's title.
Case: Baneshwar Mahato -Vs- Bishnupada Mahato & Anr.
Citation: 2026 LiveLaw (Cal) 112
Holding that mere presence during a village scuffle cannot sustain a conviction for grievous hurt when the prosecution fails to clearly establish the specific overt act of the accused, the Calcutta High Court set aside the conviction of a man sentenced to two years' rigorous imprisonment for allegedly attacking a co-villager with a sharp weapon during a land dispute. Justice Ananya Bandyopadhyay observed that the prosecution evidence suffered from material contradictions and absence of corroboration, entitling the accused to the benefit of doubt.
Case: Asit Barik Vs. The Superintendent of Police, Central Bureau of Investigation
Citation: 2026 LiveLaw (Cal) 113
The Calcutta High Court has granted anticipatory bail to an accused in a CBI-probed murder arising out of the 2021 post-poll violence, holding that even in cases involving grave allegations, pre-arrest protection must be decided on the “nature and quality of evidence prima facie available” and not merely on the seriousness of the offence. Justice Jay Sengupta observed that courts must carefully assess whether the materials actually justify custodial interrogation at the stage of bail.
Case: BHARAT SONI & ORS. VS NANDINI SONI & ANR.
Citation: 2026 LiveLaw (Cal) 114
Holding that mere omnibus allegations and belated medical certificates cannot justify subjecting distant in-laws to a serious charge of attempt to culpable homicide, the Calcutta High Court partly allowed a criminal revision and discharged the mother-in-law and sister-in-law of a woman from prosecution under Section 308 IPC in a matrimonial cruelty case.
Case: Ranajit Rakshit Vs. The State of West Bengal & Ors.
Citation: 2026 LiveLaw (Cal) 115
The Calcutta High Court has held that once a competent authority concludes that a person does not belong to the Other Backward Classes (OBC) category, it is incumbent upon the authority to immediately proceed with the cancellation of the OBC certificate. The Court directed the Sub-Divisional Officer (SDO), Tamluk, to cancel the OBC certificate of an elected Gram Panchayat Pradhan within one week.
Case: Sudip Ranjan Dey VERSUS The Manager, Reliance General Insurance CO. LTD. & ANR.
Citation: 2026 LiveLaw (Cal) 116
The Calcutta High Court has enhanced compensation to ₹6 lakh for a road accident victim who lost his right leg above the knee, holding that assessment of damages in motor accident claims cannot be confined to mere loss of employment and must account for lifelong disability, pain, future medical expenses, and loss of amenities.
Justice Biswaroop Chowdhury observed that “damages do not only mean pecuniary damage but also loss of amenity and disruption of normal functioning,” stressing that the right to move and work freely with a healthy body is a basic human right. The Court said a “narrow pedantic view” that denies enhanced compensation simply because the claimant retained his job would defeat the object of the Motor Vehicles Act.
Case: The State of West Bengal -Vs- Debabrata @ Bapi Goswami and Ors
Citation: 2026 LiveLaw (Cal) 117
The Calcutta High Court has refused to interfere with a decades-old acquittal in a 1982 dacoity case, holding that serious lapses in identification, doubtful recovery of stolen articles, and contradictions in seizure evidence fatally weakened the prosecution case.
Justice Ananya Bandyopadhyay, while dismissing the State's appeal, observed that the prosecution failed to conclusively establish ownership and recovery of the allegedly stolen wristwatch — the only incriminating material — and that witness testimony on identification of the accused was unreliable. The Court further noted that statements purportedly recorded under Section 27 of the Evidence Act were legally inadmissible as they amounted to confessional disclosures rather than discovery of facts.
Case: Manoj Kumar Chakraborty @ Kajal Chakraborty (Since Deceased) Represented By His Legal Heirs Smt. Pratima Chakraborty & Anr. VERSUS Ayakar Griha Nirman Samabay Samity Ltd. & Anr.
Citation: 2026 LiveLaw (Cal) 118
The Calcutta High Court has held that the illness of a litigant coupled with laches on the part of the conducting advocate can constitute “sufficient cause” for condonation of delay under Section 5 of the Limitation Act, and that such applications need only be decided on the touchstone of preponderance of probabilities.
Justice Biswaroop Chowdhury allowed a second appeal (SA 34 of 2019) filed by Manoj Kumar Chakraborty (since deceased, represented by legal heirs), setting aside the order of the First Appellate Court which had dismissed his appeal solely on the ground of delay.
Case: State of West Bengal and Others Vs. New Kenilworth Hotel Private Limited and Others
Citation: 2026 LiveLaw (Cal) 119
The Calcutta High Court has held that the State cannot discriminate between private limited companies and public limited companies while granting exemption from excise licence fees for changes in management occurring in the usual course of business, observing that such unequal treatment violates Article 14 of the Constitution. The Court ruled that even though dealing in liquor is a State privilege, the distribution of that privilege and any exemptions attached to it must satisfy standards of fairness and non-arbitrariness.