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Judicial Member Not Mandatory in NCDRC Benches: Delhi High Court

The Delhi High Court has ruled that NCDRC benches need not always include a judicial member. The judgment clarifies bench composition under the Consumer Protection Act, ensuring consumer disputes can be resolved without procedural delays.

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Judicial Member Not Mandatory in NCDRC Benches: Delhi High Court

NEW DELHI: The Delhi High Court has recently delivered an important ruling clarifying the composition of benches at the National Consumer Disputes Redressal Commission (NCDRC). Justice Manoj Jain, in a detailed 17-page judgment, held that the law does not mandate the inclusion of a judicial member in every two-member bench of the NCDRC.

The Case

The ruling came while hearing a plea filed by Navin M. Raheja and another petitioner challenging two NCDRC orders. The first order, dated 26 August 2022, directed Raheja Developers to either refund the homebuyers’ money with interest or hand over possession of units with compensation for delay. The second order, passed on 3 February 2025, rejected the company’s argument of protection under insolvency moratorium and directed its directors to personally disclose how they intended to satisfy the decree.

The petitioners argued that the NCDRC bench deciding these cases was invalid as it comprised only technical members and no judicial members.

Court’s Key Observations

Justice Jain, while dismissing the plea, made the following clarifications:

The Delhi High Court concluded that:

Accordingly, the Court dismissed the petition and upheld the validity of the NCDRC’s orders against Raheja Developers.

Case Title:
Navin M. Raheja & Anr. v. Dinesh Goyal & Ors.
CM(M) 381/2025 & CM APPL. 11218/2025 & CM APPL. 11219/2025

Read Judgment:

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