slcdailylaw
  • Home
  • Topic Search
  • Advanced Search
  • Citation Search
  • Bookmarks
  • Login
  • Superme Court
  • High Courts
(1) SUPREME COURT
Child custody

A. Child Custody—Interim custody arrangement—Best interest of child—Reference to mediation—Held: In a child custody dispute involving multiple proceedings pending between the parties before different fora, the Supreme Court, without expressing any opinion on the merits, referred the parties to the Supreme Court Mediation Centre in the paramount interest of the child. The Coordinator was directed to appoint a Mediator, and the parties were directed to participate in mediation. (Paras 2–3) B. Child Custody—Interim shared custody—Visitation and access—Held: Pending further consideration of the matter, the Court devised a detailed interim custody schedule balancing the child's welfare and the parental rights of both parties. The child was directed to remain primarily with the mother, with...

(2) SUPREME COURT
Anticipatory bail

A. Code of Criminal Procedure—Anticipatory bail—Interim protection pending consideration of petition—Held: Where the petitioners contended that they had not faced any apprehension of arrest for several years after registration of the FIR and that the police had only recently begun visiting their residence, the Supreme Court granted interim anticipatory bail pending disposal of the petition. It was directed that, in the event of arrest, the petitioners be released on anticipatory bail to the satisfaction of the concerned Investigating Officer. (Paras 2–4) B. Code of Criminal Procedure—Anticipatory bail—Interim relief—Conditions—Held: While granting interim anticipatory bail, the Court directed the petitioners to cooperate with the investigation and made the protection operative till the ne...

(3) SUPREME COURT
Suspension of sentence

A. Terrorist and Disruptive Activities (Prevention) Act, 1987—Section 3(3) read with Indian Penal Code, 1860—Section 120B—Suspension of sentence pending appeal—Held: Suspension of sentence and grant of bail pending disposal of the appeal is justified where the appellant has already undergone a substantial part of the sentence imposed and the appeal is not likely to be heard in the near future. In the present case, the appellant, sentenced to five years' rigorous imprisonment, had already undergone about three years and nine months of incarceration. Considering the period already undergone and the likelihood of delay in disposal of the appeal, the sentence was suspended and the appellant was directed to be released on regular bail on such terms and conditions as may be imposed by the Trial Court. (Paras 2–...

(4) SUPREME COURT
Suspension of sentence

A. Indian Penal Code, 1860—Section 120-B—Suspension of sentence pending appeal—Long period on bail and incarceration—Held: Where the appellant, convicted under Section 120-B IPC, had remained on bail for nearly twenty years during the pendency of proceedings and had thereafter undergone more than five years and eight months of incarceration, the Supreme Court held that these circumstances justified suspension of sentence pending disposal of the appeal. (Paras 2–5) B. Criminal Procedure—Suspension of sentence—Pending appeal before Supreme Court—Relevant considerations—Held: Where leave had been granted and the appeal involved substantial questions of fact and law requiring adjudication, and the appellant had earlier remained on bail for a prolonged period without misuse of liberty be...

(5) SUPREME COURT
Appeal against acquittal

A. Indian Penal Code, 1860—Section 302—Conviction reversed in appeal against acquittal—Suspension of sentence pending appeal—Held: Where the Trial Court had acquitted the appellant of the charge under Section 302 IPC but the High Court reversed the acquittal and convicted him, sentencing him to imprisonment for life, the existence of conflicting findings by the two Courts, coupled with the period of incarceration already undergone by the appellant, constituted sufficient grounds for suspension of sentence pending disposal of the appeal. (Paras 1–2) B. Criminal Procedure—Suspension of sentence pending appeal—Life imprisonment—Relevant considerations—Held: While considering suspension of sentence in an appeal against conviction, the Court may take into account the divergent findings r...

(6) SUPREME COURT
Acquittal

A. Indian Penal Code, 1860—Sections 326 and 448 (Section 307—Acquittal by High Court)—Sentence undergone pending appeal—Interim bail—Held: Where the appellant had been acquitted by the High Court of the offence under Section 307 IPC, while the convictions under Sections 326 and 448 IPC were affirmed, and it was submitted that he had already undergone more than ten years of incarceration, the Supreme Court directed that, if the appellant continued to remain in custody, he be released on bail forthwith to the satisfaction of the Trial Court, unless his detention was required in connection with any other case. (Paras 2–4) B. Criminal Procedure—Interim directions pending appeal—Continued incarceration after substantial custody—Held: Pending further hearing of the appeal, where the appel...

Bail Granted
(7) SUPREME COURT
NDPS

A. Narcotic Drugs and Psychotropic Substances Act, 1985—Section 21—Regular bail—Possession of intermediate quantity of heroin—Criminal antecedents—Held: Bail was rightly declined where the petitioner was charged under Section 21 of the NDPS Act for possession of 29.84 grams of heroin (intermediate quantity) and had five criminal antecedents. The petitioner's criminal history disentitled him to the grant of bail on merits. (Paras 1–2) B. Narcotic Drugs and Psychotropic Substances Act, 1985—Section 64A—De-addiction/Rehabilitation—Benefit of immunity and rehabilitation—Scope—Held: The benefit contemplated under Section 64A of the NDPS Act is not available to an accused charged under Section 21 for possession of intermediate quantity of narcotic drugs. In the absence of ...

Dismissed
(8) SUPREME COURT
Quashing of FIR

A. Code of Criminal Procedure, 1973—Section 155(2)—Non-cognizable offences—Investigation without Magistrate's order—Challenge to investigation—Held: Where the FIR discloses only non-cognizable offences, the contention that the police could not have conducted the investigation without obtaining an order of the Magistrate under Section 155(2) CrPC is a question that can appropriately be raised before the jurisdictional Magistrate at the stage of consideration of the final report. The Supreme Court left the issue open to be urged before the Magistrate. (Paras 2, 5–6) B. Code of Criminal Procedure, 1973—Section 482—Quashing of FIR—Filing of final report during pendency of proceedings—Held: In view of the filing of the final report before the Magistrate during the pendency of t...

Appeal dismissed
(9) SUPREME COURT
Artificial Intelligence

A. Insolvency and Bankruptcy Code, 2016—Section 7—Artificial Intelligence (AI)—Reliance on fake or hallucinated precedents—Effect—Held: Any judicial or adjudicatory decision founded upon non-existent, fake or AI-generated hallucinated precedents is no decision in the eyes of law and is liable to be set aside irrespective of whether such material had a direct or indirect bearing on the outcome. Courts and Tribunals must adopt a zero-tolerance approach towards citation or reliance on unverified AI-generated authorities in order to preserve the sanctity and integrity of the adjudicatory process. (Paras 1, 6–20) B. Artificial Intelligence—Judicial Process—Professional responsibility of Bar and Bench—Held: While Artificial Intelligence may be legitimately employed as an aid to legal rese...

(10) SUPREME COURT
Territorial jurisdiction

A. Negotiable Instruments Act, 1881—Section 138—Territorial jurisdiction—Account payee cheque—Held: In cases where a cheque is delivered for collection through an account, the Court within whose local jurisdiction the branch of the bank where the payee maintains the account is situated alone has jurisdiction to inquire into and try the complaint under Section 138 of the Negotiable Instruments Act. Since the appellant maintained the relevant bank account at Bhilwara and the cause of action arose there, the Courts at Bhilwara had exclusive territorial jurisdiction to try the complaints. (Paras 4–6) Jai Balaji Industries Ltd. v. M/s HEG Ltd., 2025 SCC OnLine SC 2581—followed. B. Negotiable Instruments Act, 1881—Section 138—Transfer of complaint—Pendency of connected criminal case&md...

Appeal allowed
(1) DELHI
Habeas Corpus, Maintainability

A. Transnational Child Custody—Habeas Corpus—Maintainability—A writ petition under Article 226 seeking production and repatriation of a minor child retained in India contrary to a foreign court order is maintainable—Recognition of a foreign custody order for determining legality of retention and welfare of the child does not amount to its execution—Objection to maintainability rejected. B. Guardianship and Custody—Comity of Courts—A parent who voluntarily invoked and participated in foreign proceedings cannot repudiate the resulting adverse order—Valid foreign custody orders passed in accordance with natural justice deserve substantial weight under the doctrine of comity, and courts cannot reward deliberate non-compliance or unilateral retention of a child. C. Welfare of Minor—Se...

(2) DELHI

A. Penal Code, 1860—Sections 420, 467, 468, 471, 120B—Criminal Procedure Code, 1973 (CrPC)—Regular Bail—Forgery of Will and Property Documents—Accused persons, being sons of a deceased priest, were alleged to have forged a Will, rent receipts, and lease documents to claim ownership and mutation of temple property and to evict tenants—The contention that the alleged forgery had been committed by their deceased father, or that criminal proceedings could not continue without a civil court declaring the Will forged or without probate proceedings, was rejected—The Court held that the use of forged documents before judicial forums, apart from revenue and municipal authorities, independently attracts criminal liability, and criminal prosecution is not dependent upon prior civil adjudication regarding the...

(3) DELHI

A. Arbitration and Conciliation Act, 1996—S. 11(6)—Territorial jurisdiction—Arbitration agreement silent as to seat or venue—Where the arbitration clause does not specify the seat, venue, or place of arbitration, territorial jurisdiction under Section 11(6) is to be determined with reference to Sections 16 to 20 CPC read with Section 2(1)(e) of the Act, considering the place where the respondent resides or carries on business and where the cause of action, wholly or in part, arises—A petition under Section 11 cannot be instituted before any High Court irrespective of territorial nexus, but only before a High Court exercising supervisory jurisdiction over the competent “Court” under Section 2(1)(e)—Only material, integral, and substantial facts connected with the dispute constitute part of th...

(4) DELHI

A. Constitution of India, 1950—Art. 161—CrPC, 1973—Ss. 432, 433, 433-A—Remission and premature release policies—Constitutional and statutory powers distinguished—The Haryana Policy dated 12.4.2002, being substantially identical to the 1993 Policy considered in State of Haryana v. Jagdish, is an exercise of the Governor's constitutional power under Article 161, notwithstanding the absence of an express reference to that provision—A statutory policy framed under Sections 432 and 433 CrPC cannot override or supersede a policy issued in exercise of the independent constitutional power under Article 161—Consequently, the Haryana Policy dated 13.8.2008, expressly issued under the CrPC, cannot supersede the 2002 Policy in cases governed by the latter, and the appellant's claim for premature...

(5) DELHI
Dying declaration

A. IPC, 1860—Ss. 302, 498-A r/w 34—Murder and cruelty—Multiple inconsistent dying declarations—Conviction unsustainable—A conviction may rest on a solitary, wholly reliable dying declaration without corroboration, but where multiple dying declarations are materially inconsistent, each must independently satisfy the tests of voluntariness, truthfulness, fitness of mind, and freedom from tutoring—The deceased, suffering 100% burns, gave three different versions: accidental burns in the MLC, an oral accusation to a relative, and a detailed statement before the SDM—The MLC version remained unproved as the recording doctor was not examined; the oral declaration was doubtful since the deceased had been declared medically unfit at the relevant time and the witness had omitted such facts in earlier statem...

(6) DELHI

A. Administrative Law—Blacklisting of contractors—Duration of debarment—Held, an order of blacklisting cannot operate indefinitely or permanently and must conform to the principles of proportionality and applicable administrative guidelines prescribing the maximum period of debarment—Continuous blacklisting since 2008 was held to be arbitrary, unreasonable, and legally unsustainable, particularly in light of the subsequent development of jurisprudence governing the permissible duration of such punitive measures. (Paras 24, 30, 35, 39, 45) B. Administrative Law—Remedies—Continuing and recurring cause of action—Held, the continuance of an unlawful order of blacklisting gives rise to a recurring cause of action, entitling the affected contractor to challenge the ongoing deprivation notwithstanding...

(7) HIMACHAL PRADESH

A. Land Acquisition Act, 1894—Section 18—Compensation for acquisition of land—Apple trees uprooted and partially damaged—Enhancement of compensation—Held, the claimant was entitled to compensation in respect of 14 uprooted apple trees, in accordance with the expert valuation report (Ext. PW-1/A), which assessed the loss at Rs. 2,66,889/-—The Reference Court erred in restricting compensation to 12 trees despite the expert evidence supporting the existence and valuation of 14 uprooted trees—The award was accordingly enhanced to that extent. (Paras 9-13) B. Evidence—Compensation for partially damaged trees—Burden of proof—Held, a claim for compensation in respect of partially damaged apple trees cannot be allowed in the absence of reliable documentary or expert evidence establish...

(8) HIMACHAL PRADESH

A. Bharatiya Nyaya Sanhita, 2023—Sections 109, 190, 191(2), 191(3), 115(2) and 117(2)—Bail—Principles governing grant—Held, where the allegations disclose that the accused, acting in furtherance of a common intention, attacked the victims with a deadly weapon and caused serious injuries, the gravity of the offence and the severity of the prescribed punishment constitute significant considerations against the grant of bail—The Court must also assess the possibility of the accused absconding, influencing witnesses, or otherwise interfering with the course of justice—In the facts of the case, these considerations weighed against enlargement of the petitioner on bail. (Paras 11-13) B. Criminal Procedure—Bail jurisprudence—Relevant factors for exercise of discretion—Held, the discretion ...

(9) HIMACHAL PRADESH

A. Bharatiya Nyaya Sanhita, 2023—Section 103; Arms Act, 1959—Sections 25 and 27—Regular bail—Parameters governing grant in heinous offences—Held, while considering a prayer for bail in cases involving allegations of murder and criminal conspiracy, the Court must evaluate the nature and gravity of the accusations, the severity of the punishment prescribed, the prima facie material connecting the accused with the offence, the likelihood of influencing witnesses or obstructing the administration of justice, and the larger societal impact of the crime—Where the allegations disclose prima facie involvement of the petitioner in facilitating the commission of the offence as part of a conspiracy to commit murder, the seriousness of the charge and the possibility of punishment extending to death or imprisonment ...

(10) HIMACHAL PRADESH
Anticipatory bail

A. Bharatiya Nyaya Sanhita, 2023—Sections 103 and 3(5); Arms Act, 1959—Sections 25 and 27—Anticipatory bail—Heinous offences involving murder and conspiracy—Held, the extraordinary remedy of pre-arrest bail is not to be granted as a matter of course and is intended only for exceptional situations—While considering such relief, the Court must have due regard to the gravity and nature of the accusation, the prima facie involvement of the accused, the impact on investigation, and the severity of the prescribed punishment—In cases attracting punishment of death or imprisonment for life under Section 103 of the Bharatiya Nyaya Sanhita, 2023, the grant of anticipatory bail is ordinarily inappropriate unless compelling circumstances are established. (Paras 9, 12, 13, 17, 18) B. Criminal Procedure Code...

slcdailylaw

Tomar Publication

561, Sec-2, Jagriti Vihar, Meerut-250004

0121 3561932, +91 9458 5523 61

tomarpublication999@gmail.com

Terms & Conditions | Privacy Policy

© SLC Daily law all right reserved.

Cookies Required

Please enable cookies in your browser settings to continue.