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Where an appeal from any order is allowed and such order is made by a Court in the exercise of appellate jurisdiction, than appeal shall lie to–
The Court to which an appeal would lie from the decree in the suit in which such order was made
High Court
Supreme Court
District Court
- When an appeal from an order is allowed and that order was made by a court exercising appellate jurisdiction, the law says the next appeal should go to the same court where an appeal would lie if it was a decree from the original suit.
- Option 1: The Court to which an appeal would lie from the decree in the suit in which such order was made - This is correct. The logic is that appeals follow the path as if you were appealing the original judgment.
- Option 2: High Court - Only correct if, in that case, the decree would also go there, but not universally true.
- Option 3: Supreme Court - Not usual unless it's a specific special case.
- Option 4: District Court - This is usually not correct for secondary appeals.
By: santosh ProfileResourcesReport error
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