employees would be deprived of livelihood and the allottees would suffer
irreparable injury in as much as they will have to stop the ongoing projects ... three tests,
namely, prima facie test, balance of convenience test and irreparable injury
test. If the plaintiff has an arguable case and bring in legal
impugned order because no ease of failure of justice or irreparable injury was made out in the case. Attention of the learned single Judge ... allowed to stand would occasion failure of justice or cause irreparable injury to the party against whom it was made. Neither of these conditions mentioned
favour of the
plaintiff;
(c) Whether the plaintiff would suffer an irreparable injury if his
prayer for interlocutory injunction is disallowed? And
(iii) Whether temporary
petitioner and the third that the petitioner would suffer an irreparable injury if its prayer for
injunction in this application is not allowed ... defendant, the plaintiff cannot be held to have suffered any irreparable injury by
any breach of contract committed by the defendant and consequently, the plaintiff
Irreparable injury, however, does not mean that there
must be no physical possibility of repairing the injury but
means only that the Injury must ... Irreparable injury, however, does not mean
that there must be no physical possibility of
repairing the injury, but means only that the
injury must
Shri.Kshetra Upadhivanta Mandal vs U.F.M. Ananthraj S/O Dattatreya Adi on 24
trial. Also, holding that both the balance of convenience and irreparable injury was also tilted in favour of the petitioners, hence, allowed the application ... three golden principles of prima facie case, balance of convenience and irreparable injury have to co-exist and the trial court did not deal with
Shree. Samsthana vs U.F.M. Ananthraj on 24 August, 2020
R
IN THE HIGH
Godrej Properties Limited vs Frontier Home Developers Pvt. Ltd & Ors. on 3 April, 2025
Irreparable
injury, however, does not mean that there must be no physical
possibility of repairing the injury, but means only that the injury must ... injury refers
to an injury of such a substantial nature that it cannot be adequately
remedied or compensated by monetary damages. The term irreparable injury