A bench of Chief Justice G Rohini and Justice Sangita Dhingra Sehgal is likely to hear the matter on August 12.
Ansell has challenged the Centre's March 2, 2016 order whereby the ceiling price for one unit of condom was fixed at Rs 8.21 plus local taxes with effect from April 1.
The company has contended that the decision was taken "without taking into account the different varieties of condoms available in the market and the costs incurred for manufacture of such varieties of condoms, thereby treating unequals equally".
The high court while giving its ruling had also set aside two price fixation orders of the government, Ansell has said in its plea which also seeks a declaration that the standards for contraceptives prescribed in the Drugs and Cosmetics Rules are ultra vires the Drugs and Cosmetics Act.
Apart from seeking quashing of the March 2, 2016 decision of the government, the company has also sought an order that only utility or basic condoms are covered by the Drug Price Control Order (DPCO), 2013 and "not pleasure and poly-isoprene condoms".