Bombay High Court Tells Salman Khan's Neighbour to Delete Posts

Bombay High Court Tells Salman Khan's Neighbour to Delete Posts: What the Panvel Farmhouse Case Is Really About

12 June 2026

A property dispute between two neighbours sounds ordinary enough until one of them is Salman Khan, the other is a retired NRI living in the United States, and the fight has spilled across YouTube, Twitter, and the Indian court system for years. The Bombay High Court Salman Khan neighbour case took a significant turn this week when Justice Sharmila Deshmukh directed Ketan Kakkad to consider deleting his social media posts against the actor and issued a pointed observation about what social media access actually entitles people to do.

The short answer: not as much as most people assume.


What the Salman Khan Panvel Property Dispute Is Actually About


The roots of this case go back decades. Ketan Kakkad has claimed that in or around 1995, he and his wife acquired a plot of land near Salman Khan's farmhouse for constructing a house and ashram. Kakkad also claimed that the plot of land allotted to him was allegedly cancelled by the Maharashtra forest department at the behest and in collusion with Salman, and that entry and exit to his plot of land were illegally acquired and blocked by constructing a gate.


That is his side. Salman Khan's side is different. Khan says Kakkad's social media posts are defamatory and hurt his reputation. He also says some content is communally provocative.

Kakkad alleged that Khan violated environmental norms and blocked access to his property. Kakkad says he approached authorities on this issue and that no action was taken despite this. He subsequently posted tweets and participated in YouTube interviews to talk about the dispute.


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What Happened in Court This Week


A single-judge bench of Justice Sharmila Deshmukh was hearing an appeal filed by Khan against a civil court order refusing to grant him interim relief in a defamation suit he filed against his neighbour Ketan Kakkad over tweets and YouTube videos concerning the property dispute.

The civil court had refused to grant Salman Khan the relief he asked for. He then moved the Bombay High Court. This is now the appeal stage.

Justice Deshmukh questioned the need to upload such content online and asked why people avoid approaching proper authorities. Her questions were aimed at both sides. Justice Deshmukh said that having social media access is not enough reason to upload videos about any person. She stressed this applies to common citizens and celebrities alike.


The judge indicated that parties should refrain from litigating their disputes on social media and instead pursue remedies before appropriate legal forums. She also suggested that Kakkad consider deleting tweets and videos relating to the dispute. The bench expressed disapproval of the continued circulation of such content and underscored that judicial time ought not to be spent on examining whether such videos should remain online.


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Why This Case Matters Beyond Bollywood


This is where things get genuinely important for anyone who has ever posted about a personal dispute on the internet, which is a lot of people.

The Bombay High Court social media defamation observation is not a new legal principle. But it is a clear, recent restatement from a sitting judge of what Indian law has long held: that the right to post online is not the right to defame. The platform does not change the liability.

Bombay High Court Tells Salman Khan's Neighbour to Delete Posts

Khan had dragged in Google, YouTube, Facebook, Twitter, and other social platform content creators as parties in his defamation suit, also seeking a gag order to restrain his neighbour from posting objectionable statements till the outcome of the suit. The fact that tech platforms are named as parties signals how seriously Indian courts are treating the distribution infrastructure, not just the person who originally posted the content.

The court was also informed that the content in question had garnered significant viewership. That reach is part of why Salman Khan says the damage to his reputation is real and ongoing.


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The Legal Timeline That Led Here


The case has a layered history. A Mumbai city civil court first refused to grant the requested interim relief. Khan moved the Sessions Court, which also refused to pass a restraining order. He then filed an appeal in the Bombay High Court against the Sessions Court's earlier order. The High Court has now heard the matter and suggested the posts be deleted while the matter continues.


Sessions Court had previously noted that Kakkad had placed on record evidence including complaints and show-cause notices to Salman about alleged encroachments in his Panvel property, in the public interest as a whistleblower. That whistleblower framing is why this case is not simple, and why courts at multiple levels have declined to simply hand Salman Khan what he asked for.

The tension here is legitimate. Environmental violations, if real, are matters of genuine public interest. But the court's point stands: the appropriate forum for such claims is a regulatory body or a court, not a social media feed.


What Happens Next


The Bombay High Court has not yet passed a final order. The matter remains under hearing. The suggestion to delete posts is exactly that, a judicial suggestion, not yet a binding direction. How Kakkad responds, and what the court ultimately decides on the appeal, will shape the next chapter.


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Disclaimer: This article is based on information available across the web. Parchar Manch does not take responsibility for its complete accuracy, as the content could not be fully verified. 

FAQs

Who is Ketan Kakkad and why is he in a dispute with Salman Khan?

Ketan Kakkad is an NRI who owns land adjacent to Salman Khan's farmhouse in Panvel. He has alleged that Khan violated environmental norms, blocked access to his property, and that authorities failed to act on his complaints. Salman Khan denies these allegations and calls Kakkad's social media posts defamatory.

What did the Bombay High Court actually say?

Justice Sharmila Deshmukh observed that access to social media does not entitle anyone to post defamatory content, whether the target is a private citizen or a celebrity. She suggested Kakkad delete the tweets and YouTube videos related to the dispute and said disputes should be resolved through proper legal forums.

Has any court ordered the posts to be removed as a binding directive?

Not yet. The suggestion to delete posts came as judicial advice during the hearing of Salman Khan's appeal. The court has not yet passed a final order. The matter is still being heard.

Why did lower courts refuse Salman Khan's request for a gag order?

The Sessions Court noted that Kakkad had presented complaints and show-cause notices as evidence of his whistleblower role in flagging alleged environmental violations at the Panvel farmhouse. This led the court to decline the interim restraining order at that stage.

What legal provisions apply to social media defamation cases in India?

Defamation in India is addressed under the Indian Penal Code and now the Bharatiya Nyaya Sanhita, as well as through civil suits. Courts can order the removal of defamatory content and restrain its further publication. Platforms like YouTube and Twitter can also be made parties to such suits.

Where is the Panvel farmhouse located?

The farmhouse is located in Panvel, Raigad district, Maharashtra. It falls within the Matheran Eco-Sensitive Zone, which is relevant to Kakkad's environmental violation allegations.

Bombay High Court Tells Salman Khan's Neighbour to Delete Posts: What the Panvel Farmhouse Case Is Really About