(1) SUPREME COURT
Arbitral award
A. Arbitration and Conciliation Act, 1996—Sections 33 and 34(3)—Limitation for Filing Application to Set Aside Arbitral Award—Commencement of Limitation—Held: Where a request under Section 33 of the Act has been formally made and entertained by the Arbitral Tribunal, the limitation prescribed under Section 34(3) for filing an application to set aside the arbitral award commences only from the date on which such request is disposed of by the Tribunal. The provision does not distinguish between applications that are ultimately allowed, dismissed, or found to be untenable. Once the jurisdiction of the Arbitral Tribunal under Section 33 is invoked, parties are entitled to compute limitation from the date of disposal of such proceedings. (Paras 13–15, 18). B. Arbitration and Conciliation Act, 1996—Section...
(2) SUPREME COURT
Hindu Law
A. Hindu Succession Act, 1956—Sections 8, 10 and 19—Succession to Separate Property of Male Hindu Dying Intestate—Tenants-in-Common and Not Joint Tenants—Held: On the death of a male Hindu intestate, his separate property devolves upon the Class I heirs in accordance with Sections 8 and 10 of the Hindu Succession Act. By virtue of Section 19, such heirs take the property as tenants-in-common and not as joint tenants, each acquiring a definite and identifiable share. The doctrine of survivorship has no application to such succession, and each heir’s share devolves upon his or her own heirs. Property inherited under Section 8 is held in an individual capacity and does not assume the character of joint family or coparcenary property. (Paras 6–8). B. Hindu Law—Karta—Legal Necessity—Powe...
(3) SUPREME COURT
Criminal conspiracy
A. Criminal Procedure Code, 1973—Sections 437 and 439—Bail in Murder and Criminal Conspiracy Cases—Principles Governing Grant of Bail—Held: Though “bail is the rule and jail is the exception” remains a cardinal principle of criminal jurisprudence, it is not an absolute rule. In cases involving grave offences such as murder and criminal conspiracy punishable with death or imprisonment for life, the Court must balance the liberty of the accused against factors such as the existence of a prima facie case, gravity of the offence, nature of evidence, possibility of witness intimidation, likelihood of tampering with evidence, antecedents, age, health and the progress of trial. Where prima facie material indicates overt acts, conspiracy and shared intention, bail may justifiably be refused. (Paras 31–33)...
(4) SUPREME COURT
Service Law
A. Service Law—Pensionary Benefits—Temporary Status Casual Labourers—Entitlement to Pension—Held: Casual labourers who were conferred temporary status under the applicable Scheme and completed the prescribed period of continuous service are entitled to the benefits available to temporary Group ‘D’ employees, including pensionary benefits, notwithstanding the absence of formal regularisation. Pension is a continuing right and a recurring cause of action, and its denial cannot be justified merely on the ground of delay in approaching the Court or on account of administrative inaction in regularising the employee. (Paras 34, 35, 41, 76–79). B. Central Civil Services (Temporary Service) Rules, 1965—Rule 10(1-B)—Temporary Government Servants—Superannuation Pension and Family Pensio...
(5) SUPREME COURT
Quashing of FIR
A. Bharatiya Nyaya Sanhita, 2023—Sections 109(1), 127(2), 191(2), 308(5), 351(3) and 352—Quashing of FIR—Delay in Lodging FIR—Held: Mere delay in lodging a First Information Report, without any other attendant circumstances rendering the prosecution case inherently improbable or absurd, cannot by itself constitute a valid ground for quashing the FIR. Delay is only one of the factors to be considered during appreciation of evidence at trial and not a standalone basis for terminating criminal proceedings at the threshold. The High Court erred in quashing the FIR solely on the ground of a delay of 24 days in its registration. (Paras 9, 11, 12, 13). B. Bharatiya Nagarik Suraksha Sanhita, 2023—Quashing of FIR—Duty of High Court to Examine Nature of Allegations—Held: While exercising jurisdiction to ...
(6) SUPREME COURT
Quashing of proceeding, POCSO
A. Bharatiya Nyaya Sanhita, 2023—Sections 65, 74, 115, 351 and 352 and Protection of Children from Sexual Offences Act, 2012—Sections 3 and 4—Rape and Sexual Abuse Allegations—Quashing of Proceedings—Held: Allegations against the father and uncle of the prosecutrix alleging rape and sexual assault were vague, omnibus and unsupported by specific factual particulars, dates, circumstances or corroborative material. In the backdrop of prolonged matrimonial discord and multiple litigations between the parties, the complaint appeared to be a counterblast to ongoing disputes. Mere bald allegations, without prima facie material satisfying the ingredients of the offences, cannot justify continuation of criminal prosecution. Proceedings quashed. (Paras 7.1 to 7.7, 8.2). B. Bharatiya Nyaya Sanhita, 2023—Section...
(7) SUPREME COURT
Life imprisonment
A. Indian Evidence Act, 1872—Sections 133 and 114 Illustration (b)—Approver's Testimony—Evidentiary Value and Corroboration—Held: Testimony of an approver is admissible and conviction is not illegal merely because it is based on uncorroborated approver evidence. Corroboration is a rule of prudence and not an inflexible rule of law. Where the approver's testimony is credible, inculpatory, inspires confidence, and stands corroborated by surrounding circumstances in material particulars, it can safely form the basis of conviction. Mere fact that the approver did not inflict the fatal blows does not render his testimony self-exculpatory or unreliable. (Paras 23–39). B. Indian Penal Code, 1860—Sections 120A, 120B and 302—Criminal Conspiracy to Commit Murder—Liability of Co-conspirator&...
(8) SUPREME COURT
Habeas Corpus
A. Constitution of India, 1950—Article 21—Personal Liberty—Illegal Detention after Judicial Order of Release—Compensation—Held: Continued detention of a convict after a competent Court has directed his release on parole, despite compliance with conditions and furnishing of sureties, constitutes illegal detention and violation of the fundamental right to personal liberty under Article 21. The State cannot justify non-release on the ground of internal administrative deliberations regarding filing of an appeal. For unlawful deprivation of liberty for twenty-four days, compensation awarded as a public law remedy. (Paras 7, 9–12). B. Constitution of India, 1950—Articles 32 and 226—Writ of Habeas Corpus—Scope and Maintainability—Held: Habeas corpus is a constitutional remedy availab...
(9) SUPREME COURT
Wild Life
A. Constitution of India, 1950—Articles 21, 48A and 51A(g)—Environmental protection and conservation of forests and wildlife—Agasthyamalai landscape, Tiger Reserves and Wildlife Sanctuaries—Held: Protection of forests, wildlife habitats and ecologically sensitive regions is not merely a statutory obligation but a constitutional imperative flowing from Articles 21, 48A and 51A(g)—Continued encroachments in Kalakad-Mundanthurai Tiger Reserve (KMTR), Srivilliputhur-Megamalai Tiger Reserve (SMTR) and Kanyakumari Wildlife Sanctuary (KWS) seriously threaten biodiversity, water security and ecological balance—State authorities directed to undertake time-bound eviction, restoration and conservation measures under continuous monitoring of the Central Empowered Committee (CEC). (Paras 46–66) B. Forest (C...
(10) SUPREME COURT
Contempt of Court
A. Contempt of Courts Act, 1971—Civil Contempt—Wilful disobedience of orders of Supreme Court—De-sealing and restoration of possession of property—Held: Persistent failure of public authorities to comply with the Supreme Court’s direction to de-seal the petitioner’s property and restore possession, despite repeated representations and legal notice, constituted a serious matter warranting contempt proceedings—Judicial orders must be complied with promptly and cannot be ignored at the convenience of administrative authorities—However, since compliance was ultimately effected and unconditional apologies were tendered, contempt notice was discharged. (Paras 15–21) B. Contempt of Courts Act, 1971—Public officials—Duty to obey judicial orders—Rule of law—Held: Cont...
(1) ALLAHABAD
Rejection of plaint
A. Uttar Pradesh Regulation of Urban Premises Tenancy Act, 2021—Sections 1(3), 4, 9 and 38(1)—Jurisdiction of Civil Court—Maintainability of SCC Suit—Held: Where the plaint itself admits the applicability of the Uttar Pradesh Regulation of Urban Premises Tenancy Act, 2021 to the premises in question, acknowledges the existence of a landlord-tenant relationship, and invokes Sections 4 and 9 of the Act for enforcement of tenancy obligations and recovery of enhanced rent, the dispute is governed exclusively by the statutory mechanism under the Act. In view of the express bar contained in Section 38(1), the jurisdiction of the civil court, including the SCC Court, stands excluded and the plaint is liable to be rejected as barred by law. (Paras 14–18). B. Code of Civil Procedure, 1908—Order VII Rule 11&md...
(2) ALLAHABAD
Eviction
A. U.P. Urban Buildings (Regulation of Letting, Rent and Eviction) Act, 1972—Sections 20(2)(a), 20(4) and 30 read with Rule 21 of U.P. Urban Buildings (Regulation of Letting, Rent and Eviction) Rules, 1972—Default in payment of rent—Validity of deposits under Section 30—Held: Deposits made by tenant under Section 30(1) without compliance of mandatory requirement of notice in prescribed Form ‘F’ and process fee under Rule 21 are invalid and cannot be treated as statutory payment of rent—Such defective deposits cannot be adjusted while considering benefit under Section 20(4). (Paras 30–31, 36–41, 48–53) B. U.P. Urban Buildings (Regulation of Letting, Rent and Eviction) Act, 1972—Section 30 read with Rule 21 of Rules, 1972—Mandatory compliance—Held: Requirement ...
(3) ALLAHABAD
Proof of Will
A. Indian Succession Act, 1925—Will—Probate—Effect of probate proceedings—Joint bank accounts—Devolution under Will—Held: Once Will stood duly probated in probate proceedings, it operated in rem and did not require fresh proof under Section 68 of Evidence Act—Clause in Will expressly providing that cash balance in joint accounts shall devolve upon surviving joint holders entitled plaintiff to claim 50% share in joint bank account balance after death of testator. (Paras 54–59) B. Indian Evidence Act, 1872—Section 68—Proof of Will—Requirement of examining attesting witness—Dispensation of proof—Held: Where execution, existence and genuineness of Will were never disputed by parties and Will already stood proved in probate proceedings, requirement of examining at...
(4) ALLAHABAD
Maintainability
A. Uttar Pradesh Regulation of Urban Premises Tenancy Act, 2021—Sections 4(1), 4(3)(b), 4(7), 21, 38(2) and 42—Oral and unwritten tenancies—Maintainability of proceedings before Rent Authority—Held: Mere absence of written tenancy agreement does not render proceedings under Act, 2021 non-maintainable—Where landlord-tenant relationship is admitted or otherwise established, Rent Authority retains jurisdiction notwithstanding tenancy being oral, month-to-month or unsupported by formal written agreement—Act does not exclude unwritten tenancies from its statutory ambit. (Paras 83–86, 95–103, 111–118) B. Uttar Pradesh Regulation of Urban Premises Tenancy Act, 2021—Sections 4(1), 4(3)(b) and 4(7)—Nature and effect of statutory requirement of written tenancy agreement—Held...
(5) ALLAHABAD
Tenancy
A. Uttar Pradesh Regulation of Urban Premises Tenancy Act, 2021—Sections 4, 21, 38 & 42—Maintainability of proceedings before Rent Authority—Absence of written tenancy agreement—Held: Mere absence of written tenancy agreement does not render proceedings under Act, 2021 non-maintainable—Where relationship of landlord and tenant is admitted or otherwise established, Rent Authority retains jurisdiction to entertain eviction and tenancy disputes notwithstanding oral or month-to-month tenancy arrangements—Act does not exclude unwritten tenancies from its statutory ambit. (Paras 83–91, 95–103, 111–118) B. Uttar Pradesh Regulation of Urban Premises Tenancy Act, 2021—Section 4—Nature and effect of provision—Held: Requirement of written tenancy agreement and furnishing ...
(6) ALLAHABAD
Maintainability
A. Uttar Pradesh Regulation of Urban Premises Tenancy Act, 2021—Section 10—Summary rent proceedings—Preliminary issue of maintainability—Held: Tenant has no indefeasible right to insist that objection regarding maintainability be decided as a preliminary issue—Rent Authority is competent to defer consideration of such objection and decide same along with merits at final stage, particularly where proceedings are at stage of final hearing and segregation would delay disposal. (Paras 6–7, 11) B. Uttar Pradesh Regulation of Urban Premises Tenancy Act, 2021—Section 10—Interlocutory order—Appealability—Held: Order declining to decide maintainability objection as preliminary issue and directing matter to proceed for final hearing is purely interlocutory in nature—Such order nei...
(7) ALLAHABAD
Eviction
A. Provincial Small Cause Courts Act, 1887—Section 23—Return of plaint—Dispute involving question of title—Held: Where Court of Small Causes records finding that dispute between parties involves serious, substantial and bona fide question of title requiring adjudication upon competing chains of ownership, proper course is to return plaint for presentation before competent civil court—Dismissal of suit on merits in such circumstances amounts to jurisdictional error. (Paras 10–26) B. Provincial Small Cause Courts Act, 1887—Section 23—Scope and object—Summary jurisdiction of Small Cause Court—Held: Section 23 embodies jurisdictional limitation upon summary powers of Small Cause Court and preserves distinction between incidental examination of title and final adjudication of propr...
(8) HIMACHAL PRADESH
Security cheque
A. Negotiable Instruments Act, 1881—Sections 118, 139—Presumption—Rebuttal—Held: Once issuance of cheque and signature thereon are admitted or proved, statutory presumption arises that cheque was issued towards discharge of legally enforceable debt—Burden shifts on accused to rebut presumption on preponderance of probabilities—Failure to lead evidence or raise probable defence results in conviction. (Paras 6–8, 12) B. Negotiable Instruments Act, 1881—Section 138—“Security cheque”—Liability—Held: Dishonour of cheque issued as “security” also attracts offence under Section 138, if it relates to a subsisting liability and becomes enforceable on default—There is no statutory exemption for security cheques under the Act. (Paras 10–11) ...
(9) ALLAHABAD
A. Uttar Pradesh Regulation of Urban Premises Tenancy Act, 2021—Section 35(1)—Appeal—Pre-deposit—Nature—Held: Requirement of pre-deposit of 50% of adjudicated amount is mandatory and jurisdictional—Use of expression “no appeal shall lie” makes it a condition precedent for institution of appeal—In absence of such deposit, appeal is non-est and not maintainable in law. (Paras 27–29, 55) B. Limitation—Pre-deposit—Interplay—Held: Pre-deposit and limitation are cumulative requirements—Deposit made beyond limitation does not validate an otherwise incompetent appeal—Appeal is treated as instituted only upon compliance of pre-deposit, and delay must be separately explained and condoned—Pre-deposit cannot cure limitation defect. (Paras 31–33, 4...
(10) ALLAHABAD
Custody of minor child
Constitution of India, 1949—Article 226—Custody of minor child—Writ jurisdiction—Natural guardian—After the death of the mother, custody of a 13-month-old child was claimed by the father as natural guardian—The child was in the care of maternal relatives—In the absence of any material showing the father to be unfit and considering his financial stability and ability to provide proper upbringing, the father’s legal and natural claim prevails—Welfare of the child does not justify denial of custody to the father merely on preference for maternal relatives—Mere claim that maternal relatives would better serve child’s welfare does not override father’s legal right —To preserve child’s emotional bond with father, custody directed to be given to him—Materna...
