M.M.S. Bedi, J.@mdashThe Plaintiff-Petitioners have filed a suit for declaration that they being coparcener with their father-Defendant No. 1,
Defendant No. 1 is not entitled to sell the property. They also seek an injunction against their father, a coparcener of the property in dispute to
alienate the property and to receive the sale consideration.
2. Vide impugned order an interim relief to restrain the Defendants from making the payments of post dated cheques to Defendant No. 1 has been
declined. A perusal of the application for interim injunction indicates that the Plaintiffs claimed that they are legally entitled to receive their share out
of the total sale consideration of Rs. 53479167/-. It is for the Plaintiff-Petitioners to satisfy the Courts below that they have got prima facie a strong
case in their favour and that balance of convenience lies in their favour. They are also required to establish that irreparable loss will be suffered in
case the sale consideration is received by their father. The order refusing injunction is an appealable order. This revision petition against the order
refusing to grant interim relief is not maintainable.
3. Counsel for the Petitioners submits that in exercise of powers under Article 227 of the Constitution of India this Court has got jurisdiction to
decide this revision petition.
4. The argument is misconceived. Mere existence of an alternative remedy would make a petition under Article 227 of the Constitution of India not
maintainable, in the circumstances of the present case.
5. Dismissed without prejudice to the rights of the Plaintiff-Petitioners.