CASES OF 2019-2020 1. Anokhilal vs. State of Madhya Pradesh
CASES OF 2019-2020 1. Anokhilal vs. State of Madhya Pradesh
CASES OF 2019-2020 1. Anokhilal vs. State of Madhya Pradesh
Topic : Only Lawyers With Minimum 10 Yrs Practice Shall Be Considered For
Representing Accused In Trial Of Offences Punishable With Death Or Life
Term
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persons belonging to the Scheduled Castes and Scheduled Tribes promoted
under the reservation policy of the State of Karnataka. The bench comprising
Justice Uday Umesh Lalit and Justice Dhananjaya Y Chandrachud observed that
this law has cured the deficiency noted in the earlier BK Pavitra judgment in
respect of the 2002 law, and it does not amount to a usurpation of judicial power
by the state legislature. The Reservation Act 2018 is a valid exercise of the
enabling power conferred by Article 16 (4A) of the Constitution, the bench
added.
Overview : Correcting its earlier erroneous judgment, the Supreme Court has
held that the teachers are entitled to invoke Payment of Gratuity Act for
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claiming gratuity from his/her employer. On January 7, 2019 the Supreme Court
bench comprising of Justice AM Sapre and Justice Indu Malhotra held that, a
teacher, irrespective of the type of educational institute he/she is working, is not
an 'employee' under Section 2(e) of the Payment of Gratuity Act and, therefore,
has no right to invoke the Act for claiming gratuity from his/her employer. On
January 8, Live Law published an article on why this judgment denying gratuity
to teachers is 'Per Incuriam'. It had quoted the 2009 amendment and 1997
notification and some high court judgments post 2009 amendment. On January
9, the bench headed by Justice Sapre suo motu listed the appeal and passed
order observing that it finds prima facie error in this judgment. It then stayed the
operation of the judgment and directed the registry to post the appeal for
rehearing.
Overview : In a historic judgment, the Supreme Court held that the office of
Chief Justice of India is a public authority under the Right to Information Act.
The Constitution Bench comprising the then CJI Ranjan Googi, Justices
Ramana, Chandrachud, Deepak Gupta and Sanjiv Khanna upheld the the 2010
judgment of Delhi HC which had held that RTI Act was applicable to CJI's
office. The Court has however underlined the importance of maintaining
confidentiality in some aspects of judicial administration, and has qualified the
right to information on the grounds of public interest. Penning his separate but
concurring opinion while dismissing the appeal against Delhi HC judgment that
held office of CJI is under purview of RTI Act, Justice DY Chandrachud
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observed that the basis for the selection and appointment of judges to the higher
judiciary must be defined and placed in the public realm.
Overview : The Supreme Court observed that a wife, who has been divorced by
the husband, on the ground that the wife has deserted him, is entitled to claim
maintenance under Section 125 of the Code of Criminal Procedure. The bench
comprising Justice Deepak Gupta and Justice Aniruddha Bose, refusing the plea
to refer this issue to a larger bench, observed that this view has been
consistently taken by the Supreme Court and is in line with both the letter and
spirit of the Criminal Procedure Code.
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8. G J Raja vs. Tejraj Surana
Overview : The Supreme Court has held that Article 62 of the Limitation Act
would only apply to suits and not to "an application" which is filed under
Section 7 of the Insolvency and Bankruptcy Code, which would fall only within
the residuary Article 137. The bench of Justice Rohinton Fali Nariman, Justice
R. Subhash Reddy and Justice Surya Kant was considering an appeal against the
NCLT order [upheld by NCLAT] that admitted a Section 7 application on the
ground that, as per article 62, the limitation period was 12 years from the date
on which the money sued has become due.
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10.Hardev Singh vs Harpreet Kaur
Topic : A Male Between The Age of 18 And 21 Yrs Cannot Be Punished For
Marrying A Female Adult
Overview : The Supreme Court held that a male aged between 18 and 21 years,
who contracts into a marriage with a female adult, cannot be punished under
Section 9 of Prohibition of Child Marriage Act, 2006.
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12.Indian Hotel and Restaurant Association (AHAR) v State of
Maharashtra, WP(c)
Overview : A two judges bench of Justices A K Sikri and Ashok Bhushan held
that there cannot be a total prohibition of dance bars in Maharashtra. The Bench
also relaxed the stringent conditions imposed by the Government for getting
license for dance bars. The Court however upheld several provisions of the
Maharashtra Prohibition of Obscene Dance in Hotels, Restaurants and Bar
Rooms and Protection of Dignity of Women (Working therein) Act, 2016. The
Court approved the definition of 'obscenity' in the Act as not vague, and also the
ban on throwing currency notes and money on the performers. The complete
prohibition on serving alcohol in the dance bars was quashed as
disproportionate.
Topic : Free speech cannot be gagged by fear of mob violence - West Bengal
cinema ban overturned
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Gupta held that free speech cannot be gagged by fear of mob violence. "The
police are not in a free society the self-appointed guardians of public morality.
The uniformed authority of their force is subject to the rule of law. They cannot
arrogate to themselves the authority to be willing allies in the suppression of
dissent and obstruction of speech and expression", the Court added.
15.M Siddiq (d) through Lrs v Mahant Suresh Das and others
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Overview : In an unanimous verdict, the Supreme Court held that the entire
disputed land of 2.77 acres in Ayodhya must be handed over for the
construction of Ram Mandir. At the same time, the Court held that an alternate
plot of 5 acres must be allotted to the Sunni Waqf Board for construction of
mosque. This direction was passed invoking powers under Article 142 of the
Constitution. The Court observed that the destruction of Babri mosque in 1992
was a violation of law. The act of placing idols beneath the central dome of the
mosque in 1949 was an act of "desecration", observed the Court. Later, the SC
dismissed a string of review petitions filed against the verdict.
16.Manoharan v State
Overview : The Supreme Court (21) upheld the death sentence awarded to a
man involved in gang rape of a ten year old girl and thereafter murdering her
and her brother.The appeal filed by Manoharan against the High Court
judgment was heard by a three judge bench comprising of Justice Rohinton Fali
Nariman, Justice Surya Kant and Justice Sanjeev Khanna. However, Justice
Sanjiv Khanna dissented with the confirmation of death sentence and opined
that the case does not fall under the category of 'rarest of rare' case, but would
fall within the special category of cases, where the appellant should be directed
to suffer sentence for life i.e. till his natural death, without
remission/commutation.
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Overview : The Supreme Court observed that a Magistrate cannot withhold any
"document" submitted by the investigating officer along with the police report
except when it is voluminous. Further, in case of voluminous documents, the
accused can be permitted to take inspection of the concerned document either
personally or through his pleader in Court, the bench of Justice AM Khanwilkar
and Justice Dinesh Maheshwari. The contents of a memory card in relation to a
crime amount to a 'document' and not a 'material object', held the Supreme
Court while deciding Kerala actor Dileep's plea for handing over copy of the
visuals of the alleged sexual crime committed on a Kerala actress in February
2017. The SC bench comprising Justices A M Khanwilkar and Dinesh
Maheswari overturned the view taken by the High Court of Kerala that the
memory card was a material object, and hence it will not come under the ambit
of Section 207 CrPC. In cases involving issues of privacy and identity of the
complainant or witnesses, such as sexual offences, the Court said that a
balanced approach needs to be taken. The right to fair trial of the accused and
the right to privacy of the victim should be balanced.
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19.Pratap Gouda Patil and others v State of Karnataka and others
Overview : The Constitution Bench of the Supreme Court has held that Section
13(2) of the Chhattisgarh Rent Control Act, 2011, is unconstitutional as the
State Legislature lacked legislative competence to enact a provision providing
direct appeal to Supreme Court of India. The Bench comprising Justices Arun
Mishra, Indira Banerjee, Vineet Saran, M R Shah and Ravindra Bhat was
considering the reference made to it in Rajendra Diwan vs. Pradeep Kumar
Ranibala. It approved the view taken in HS Yadav vs. Shakuntala Devi Parakh,
by the bench comprising Justices Deepak Gupta and Aniruddha Bose.
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21.Ravinder Kaur Grewal and others v Manjit Kaur
Overview : In a significant judgment, the Supreme Court held that any person
who has perfected title by way of adverse possession, can file a suit for
restoration of possession in case of dispossession. The bench comprising Justice
Arun Mishra, Justice S. Abdul Nazeer and Justice MR Shah observed that plea
of acquisition of title by adverse possession can be taken by plaintiff under
Article 65 of the Limitation Act and there is no bar under the Limitation Act,
1963 to sue on aforesaid basis in case of infringement of any rights of a
plaintiff.
Overview : The Supreme Court has held that a private vehicle is not exempted
from the definition of 'public place' under the Bihar Excise (Amendment) Act
2016. This means that consumption of liquor within a private vehicle in a public
place will be an offence under the prohibition laws in Bihar. "as per Bihar
Prohibition and Excise Act, 2016 even a person consumes liquor outside the
State of Bihar and enter into the territory of Bihar and is found drunk or in a
state of drunkenness, he can be charged with offences under Section 37(b)", the
Court said.
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Topic : Suit In Respect To Properties Situated In Jurisdiction Of Different
Courts Can Be Instituted In One Of Those Courts
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25.Surinder Singh Deswal @ Col. S.S. Deswal vs. Virender Gandhi
Overview : In an important judgment, the Supreme Court held that Section 148
of the Negotiable Instruments Act as amended, shall be applicable in respect of
the appeals against the order of conviction and sentence for the offence under
Section 138 of the N.I. Act, even in a case where the criminal complaints for the
offence under Section 138 of the N.I. Act were filed prior to 2018 amendment
Act i.e., prior to 01.09.2018.
27.Tanu Ram Bora v Promod Ch.Das (D) through LRs and others
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a party, who was misled to purchase a property by erroneous representation of
title by the vendor.
Overview : The Supreme Court has reiterated that revision petitions filed under
Section 115 of the Code of Civil Procedure are not maintainable against
interlocutory orders. We are constrained to observe that every legal canon has
been thrown to the winds, this is how the bench comprising Justice Rohinton
Fali Nariman and Justice Vineet Saran described the impugned judgment in the
appeal which allowed a revision petition against an interlocutory order.
Topic : Road Traffic Offences Can Be Prosecuted Under Both IPC & Motor
Vehicles Act
Overview : The Supreme Court observed that road traffic offences can be
prosecuted under Motor Vehicles Act as well as Indian Penal Code. The bench
comprising Justice Indu Malhotra and Justice Khanna observed thus while
setting aside the direction issued by the Gauhati High Court to States of Assam,
Nagaland, Meghalaya, Manipur, Tripura, Mizoram and Arunachal Pradesh that
road traffic offences shall be dealt with only under the provisions of the Motor
Vehicles Act and not under the provisions of Indian Penal Code.
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30.Union of India v State of Maharashtra and others
Topic : Magistrate can invoke power under section 156(3) of the Code of
Criminal Procedure even at post-cognizance stage
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Overview : The Supreme Court dismissed the review petitions filed against the
December 14, 2018 judgment which declined to order probe into the corruption
allegations regarding the deal to procure 36 Rafale jets by Indian Government
form French company Dassault Aviation. The bench comprising CJI Ranjan
Gogoi, Justices S K Kaul and K M Joseph observed that the review petitions
filed by Advocate Prashant Bhushan, former Union Ministers Yashwant Sinha
and Arun Shourie lacked merits. Justice K M Joseph observed in his separate
judgment in the Rafale review that the main verdict will not stand in the way of
CBI taking lawful action on the complaint raising corruption allegations on the
Rafale deal, subject to getting approval under Section 17A of the Prevention of
Corruption Act. The same bench also closed the contempt case against Congress
MP Rahul Gandhi for 'chowkidhar chor hain' remarks, accepting his apology
Overview : The Supreme Court of India has ruled the January 2000 order of the
Governor of the erstwhile state of Andhra Pradesh which provided 100%
reservation to Scheduled Tribes (ST) candidates in posts of school teachers in
Scheduled Areas, unconstitutional.
The court also noted that within the Other Backward Castes (OBCs) and the
Scheduled Castes (SCs) and STs, reservation benefits are not reaching the truly
deserving.
The Bench, comprising Justices Arun Mishra, Indira Banerjee, Vineet Saran, M
R Shah and Aniruddha Bose, agreed with Senior Advocate Rajeev Dhavan that
the lists of those entitled to reservation must be revised from time to time.
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Topic : Centre Cannot Brand Organisations ‘Political’
Overview : The Supreme Court recently held that the central government cannot
brand an organisation political and deprive it of its right to receive foreign funds
for using legitimate forms of dissent to aid a public cause.
The judgement was delivered in response to a petition filed by the Indian Social
Action Forum (INSAF) challenging certain provisions of the Foreign
Contribution Regulation Act (FCRA), 2010 and the Foreign Contribution
(Regulation) Rules of 2011.
Overview : The Supreme Court (SC) has ordered political parties to publish the
entire criminal history of their candidates for Assembly and Lok Sabha
elections along with the reasons that forced them to field suspected criminals.
The order was a reply to the contempt petition about the general disregard
shown by political parties to a 2018 Constitution Bench judgment (Public
Interest Foundation v. Union of India) to publish the criminal details of their
candidates in their respective websites and print as well as electronic media for
public awareness.
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The SC passed an order while exercising powers under Articles 129 and 142 of
the Constitution which deals with the contempt power of the Supreme Court and
enforcement of its decrees and orders.
Overview : The Supreme Court has ruled that reservation in the matter of
promotions in public posts is not a fundamental right, and a state cannot be
compelled to offer the quota if it chooses not to. The idea that reservation is not
a right may be in consonance with the Constitution, however, the government is
still under the obligation to perform Reservation for vulnerable sections of
society.
Referring to Articles 16(4) and 16(4A), the Supreme Court held that
Reservation programmes allowed in the Constitution are derived from “enabling
provisions” and are not rights as such. No mandamus can be issued by the court
directing state governments to provide reservations. There is neither a basic
right to reservations nor a duty by the State government to provide it.
Overview : The Supreme Court held that the state has the rights to introduce a
regulatory regime in the national interest to provide minority educational
institutions with well-qualified teachers so that they can achieve excellence in
education.
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Minority institutions have the fundamental right under Article 30 of the
Constitution to establish and administer their educational institutions according
to their choice. However, they cannot ignore the regulations recommended by
the state.
The court held that the regulatory law should be a balance of the dual objectives
of ensuring the standard of excellence as well as preserving the right of
minorities to establish and administer their educational institutions.
Overview : The Supreme Court of India gave its judgement on the admission
criteria of minority institutions. It held that National Eligibility-cum-Entrance
Test (NEET) is mandatory for admission to all the medical colleges and the
right of minority institutions is not absolute and is amenable to regulation.
The SC held that the fundamental and religious rights of minorities and rights
available under Article 30 are not violated by provisions carved out in Section
10D of the MCI and Dentists Act.
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The NEET is mandatory for admission to medical colleges run by religious and
linguistic minority communities and it would apply for both aided and unaided
medical colleges administered by minorities.
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