High Court jurisdiction

The Rajasthan High Court has (i) original jurisdiction in writ matters under Article 226 of the Constitution, (ii) appellate jurisdiction over civil suits (first appeal where pecuniary value exceeds threshold), criminal appeals from Sessions Courts and Magistrates, and revisions under Section 442 BNSS (earlier 397 CrPC), and (iii) supervisory jurisdiction over all subordinate courts and tribunals under Article 227. Principal Seat is at Jodhpur; the Jaipur Bench has parallel jurisdiction over central Rajasthan.

Writ jurisdiction — when and how

Article 226 writs lie against the State and its instrumentalities for enforcement of fundamental rights or other legal rights. Common writs: habeas corpus (illegal custody); mandamus (compelling public duty); certiorari (quashing illegal orders); prohibition (forbidding tribunals from exceeding jurisdiction); quo warranto (challenging appointment to public office). Service-matter writs constitute the bulk of filings.

Bail under Section 482 BNSS and quashing under Section 528 BNSS

After the Sessions Court declines anticipatory or regular bail, the High Court is the next forum. Quashing of FIRs and proceedings under Section 528 BNSS (earlier 482 CrPC) is governed by State of Haryana v. Bhajan Lal (1992) — categories where the High Court can intervene include cases where the FIR discloses no offence, allegations are absurd, the proceedings are mala fide, or where the dispute is purely civil dressed up as criminal.

Appeals and revisions

Criminal appeals from Sessions Courts in convictions over 7 years lie to the High Court under Section 410 BNSS (earlier 374 CrPC). Civil first appeals lie under Section 96 CPC; second appeals on substantial question of law under Section 100. Revisions under Section 442 BNSS, Section 115 CPC, and Article 227 are filed where appellate remedy is not available or has been exhausted.

Practical considerations for Kota litigants

The Jaipur Bench is the typical forum for matters arising in Kota division. E-filing is now operational; physical filing also continues. Notice to government counsel through the AG’s office, urgency mentions before the Chief Justice / Senior Judges, and caveat under Section 148-A CPC are routine procedural levers. Service of pleading on the opposite side via registered post is mandatory.