(1) SUPREME COURT
Writ petition
A. Constitution of India, 1950—Article 32—Writ Petition—Petitioner chose not to press the writ petition before the Supreme Court—Held, petitioner was granted liberty to approach the competent authority of the High Court on the administrative side or avail appropriate judicial remedies in accordance with law—Writ petition disposed of with liberty reserved. ...
(2) SUPREME COURT
Compensation
A. Land Acquisition Act, 1894—Section 18—Compensation for Unauthorized Acquisition of Land—Interest—Held: Where the State takes possession of private land for a public purpose without following due process of law or paying compensation, the landowner is entitled to just compensation together with interest—The High Court rightly awarded interest on the compensation from the date of institution of the eviction suit at the rate of 9% per annum for the first year and 15% per annum thereafter until actual payment, as the respondents were wrongfully deprived of both possession and the use of their property. (Paras 1–6). B. Land Acquisition Act, 1894—Section 18—Determination of Compensation—Concurrent Findings—Frivolous Litigation by State—Held: The Reference Court was justifie...
(3) SUPREME COURT
Public Interest
A. Constitution of India, 1950—Article 21—Public Interest Litigation—Women Advocates—Infrastructure in Court Complexes—Held: Adequate and properly equipped Ladies' Bar Rooms and other essential facilities in court complexes are indispensable for ensuring the dignity, safety and effective discharge of professional responsibilities by women advocates—Provision of such infrastructure is intrinsically connected with the right to life with dignity guaranteed under Article 21 of the Constitution, and the authorities concerned are under an obligation to provide such basic facilities in courts across the country. (Paras 2, 5, 7). B. Legal Profession—Young Advocates—Financial Assistance and Welfare Measures—Held: Recognising the financial hardships faced by young and first-generation adv...
(4) SUPREME COURT
Mandatory injunction
A. Civil Procedure Code, 1908—Section 100 read with Order XXI—Second Appeal—Mandatory Injunction—Held: In a second appeal, the High Court cannot set aside concurrent decrees granting mandatory injunction and substitute them with a direction for payment of monetary compensation in the absence of any such prayer by the plaintiff or consent of the legal representatives—Such an exercise travels beyond the scope of the decree and amounts to rewriting the relief granted by the courts below—The reversal of concurrent findings without justification results in miscarriage of justice. (Paras 5–6). B. Civil Procedure Code, 1908—Section 100—Substantial Question of Law—Scope of Interference—Held: Interference in a second appeal is permissible only upon formulation and determination o...
(5) SUPREME COURT
Compensation
A. Constitution of India, 1950—Articles 19(1)(a), 19(1)(b), 19(1)(c), 19(1)(d) and 21—Right to Walk—Fundamental Right—Held: The right to walk safely on well-demarcated footpaths is an integral facet of the freedoms guaranteed under Article 19 and the right to life under Article 21 of the Constitution—Pedestrians are entitled to safe, accessible and obstruction-free footpaths, which must receive priority over motorised traffic—Correspondingly, urban development authorities, municipal corporations, municipalities and panchayats are under a constitutional obligation to create, maintain and protect adequate pedestrian infrastructure to ensure the effective enjoyment of this fundamental right. (Paras 4, 9, 13, 20). B. Constitution of India, 1950—Article 21 read with Motor Vehicles Act, 1988—Ri...
(6) SUPREME COURT
Amendment
A. Delhi Municipal Corporation Act, 1957—Sections 59(d), 92 and 95(1)—Disciplinary Authority—Effect of 1993 Amendment—Held: By virtue of the amendment introduced by Act 67 of 1993 with effect from 01.10.1993, the Commissioner became the statutory disciplinary authority for all municipal officers and employees—The pre-existing Delhi Municipal Corporation Services (Control and Appeal) Regulations, 1959, insofar as they prescribed different disciplinary authorities, stood overridden to the extent of inconsistency—Such position continues unless fresh regulations are framed under Section 95(1) in conformity with the amended statutory scheme. (Paras 30, 63, 73–81). B. Statutory Interpretation—Amendment by Substitution—Prospective Operation—Held: A statutory provision substituted by ...
(7) SUPREME COURT
A. Constitution of India, 1950—Article 21—Right to life with dignity—Protection of differently-abled persons—State's obligation—Held: The right to life under Article 21 includes the right to live with dignity, particularly for persons with disabilities living in extreme poverty—The State is under a constitutional obligation to ensure availability of basic amenities and social support to such vulnerable persons—Accordingly, the State of Odisha was directed to provide all essential facilities to a visually impaired individual and his elderly mother and to file a status report regarding compliance. (Paras 4–9) B. Persons with Disabilities—Social welfare and rehabilitation—Legal aid and livelihood—Held: A visually impaired person is entitled not only to welfare benefits ...
(8) SUPREME COURT
A. Right to Information Act, 2005—Section 24(4)—Exemption of State Organisations from RTI Act—Validity of Notification—Held: Exemption under Section 24(4) is confined only to “intelligence and security organisations” established by the State Government—The Madhya Pradesh Special Police Establishment (SPE), constituted for investigating corruption and specified criminal offences by public servants, cannot be treated as an intelligence or security organisation—Notification dated 25.08.2011 excluding the SPE from the purview of the RTI Act was held ultra vires Section 24(4) and struck down to that extent. (Paras 13–22). B. Right to Information Act, 2005—Sections 8(1)(h) and 24(4)—Information Relating to Sanction for Prosecution—Disclosure of Information—Held: In...
(9) SUPREME COURT
A. Recruitment to Public Service—Motor Vehicle Inspector Grade-II Recruitment, Tamil Nadu—Workshop Experience Certificates—Retrospective Approval of Workshops—Held: Candidates who had acquired the requisite workshop experience from Government-approved workshops could not be denied consideration merely because renewal of workshop approval was pending or subsequently granted with retrospective effect—Where re-verification conducted by the Motor Vehicles Maintenance Department established that candidates possessed more than one year of qualifying experience, their candidature was required to be considered for inclusion in the select list—Recruitment process directed to be completed expeditiously in view of the prolonged litigation. (Paras 10–13). B. Public Employment—Recruitment Process&mdas...
(10) SUPREME COURT
Election
A. Constitution of India, 1950—Article 329(b)—Election Matters—Rejection of Nomination Paper—Maintainability of Writ Petition—Held: The constitutional bar contained in Article 329(b) prohibits judicial interference in electoral matters during the course of an election—A challenge to the rejection of a nomination paper constitutes a challenge to the election process itself and can be raised only through an election petition after completion of the election—Neither Article 32 nor Article 226 can be invoked to question rejection of a nomination at an intermediate stage of the election. (Paras 6, 9–10, 12–13). B. Representation of the People Act, 1951—Section 33A—Disclosure of Criminal Cases in Affidavit—Rejection of Nomination—Held: The legality or correctness o...
(1) HIMACHAL PRADESH
A. Negotiable Instruments Act, 1881—Section 138—Dishonour of cheque—Financial capacity of complainant—Complainant alleged advancement of a loan of Rs. 7,00,000/- to the accused but failed to establish his financial capacity to lend such amount—Evidence showed that the complainant was included in the IRDP/BPL list, reflecting a monthly income of less than Rs. 2,500/-—In the absence of satisfactory proof regarding the source of funds, the statutory presumption stood effectively rebutted—Held, the accused successfully discharged the burden on the standard of preponderance of probabilities and was entitled to acquittal. [Paras 22–26] B. Criminal Procedure Code, 1973—Section 397—Revisional jurisdiction—Scope of interference—Revisional Court cannot function as a Court of...
(2) HIMACHAL PRADESH
A. Indian Penal Code, 1860—Sections 341, 354 and 506—Appeal against acquittal—Prosecution case based primarily on the testimony of the informant—Informant's version not corroborated by independent evidence—Material contradictions regarding identity of witnesses and sequence of events—No reliable supporting evidence establishing prosecution case—Held, appellate court rightly extended benefit of doubt and acquitted the accused—No interference warranted as the acquittal was a plausible and legally sustainable view. [Paras 13, 14, 16, 30, 31] B. Criminal Procedure Code, 1973—Section 161 (corresponding to Section 181 of the Bharatiya Nagarik Suraksha Sanhita, 2023)—Statements recorded by police—Evidentiary value—Statements under Section 161 CrPC are not substantive ...
(3) HIMACHAL PRADESH
A. Bharatiya Nagarik Suraksha Sanhita, 2023—Section 497; Banning of Unregulated Deposit Schemes Act, 2019—Section 13(2)—Release of Seized Vehicle—Registered owner of a seized vehicle is entitled to interim custody where no provisional attachment order has been passed by the competent authority under the Deposit Act—Release cannot be withheld merely because the vehicle was seized during investigation and shall be subject to appropriate conditions, including execution of a sapurdari bond, production of the vehicle as and when required, and non-alteration of its identity. [Paras 9–12] B. Banning of Unregulated Deposit Schemes Act, 2019—Section 32(2); Criminal Procedure Code, 1973—Search, Seizure and Release of Property—Search and seizure under the Deposit Act are governed by the provis...
(4) HIMACHAL PRADESH
A. Criminal Procedure Code, 1973—Section 391 (Corresponding to Section 432, Bharatiya Nagarik Suraksha Sanhita, 2023)—Additional Evidence in Appeal—Appellate Court may admit additional evidence only where it is essential for a just decision of the appeal—The power is exceptional and cannot be exercised to fill lacunae in the defence, permit a de novo trial, or alter the nature of the case—The Court must consider due diligence, relevance, and necessity before allowing such evidence. [Paras 10–12, 15, 18] B. Criminal Procedure Code, 1973—Section 482 (Corresponding to Section 528, Bharatiya Nagarik Suraksha Sanhita, 2023)—Inherent Powers—The High Court's inherent jurisdiction is to be exercised sparingly and only to prevent abuse of the process of law or secure the ends of justice&...
(5) JHARKHAND
Service Law
A. Service Law—Departmental Proceedings—Punishment of Compulsory Retirement—Punishment of compulsory retirement imposed on charges relating to manipulation of revenue records was quashed where the findings of the Inquiry Officer were based on no evidence, ignored the delinquent employee's defence, and were vitiated by procedural irregularities and violation of principles of natural justice—Employee held entitled to reinstatement with consequential benefits, including back wages and promotion. [Paras 19–28] B. Service Law—Departmental Inquiry—Proof of Charges—Examination of witnesses is a condition precedent for proving charges and relied-upon documents in disciplinary proceedings—Mere production of documents does not amount to proof, even in an ex parte inquiry—Failure to ...
(6) KERALA
A. Employees' Compensation Act, 1923—Section 4A(2)—Interest on Compensation—Liability of Insurer—Exclusion of the insurer's liability to pay interest is not absolute but conditional—The insurer must establish non-compliance by the employer or claimant with the statutory requirements under the Act—In the absence of specific pleadings or evidence proving such default, the insurer remains liable to pay interest on the compensation awarded. [Paras 9, 13, 14] B. Employees' Compensation Act, 1923—Section 4A(2)—Exclusion Clause—An exclusion clause relieving the insurer from liability to pay interest must be construed strictly, while coverage provisions are to receive a liberal interpretation—The burden of proving the applicability of the exclusion rests on the insurer. [P...
(7) MADRAS
A. Arbitration and Conciliation Act, 1996—Contract Termination—Employer's Right to Continue Work—Employer's right under the termination clause to execute the remaining work itself or through a third party arises only after the contractor fails to comply with its post-termination obligations within the stipulated period—Until expiry of the contractual compliance period, such right cannot be invoked. [Paras 27–34] B. Arbitration and Conciliation Act, 1996—Contract Termination—Employer's Lien—Employer's lien over the contractor's equipment and materials can be exercised only after completion of the final settlement process and determination of outstanding dues—Mere termination of the contract does not automatically confer lien rights. [Paras 25–30] C. Arbit...
(8) MADRAS
A. Tamil Nadu Acquisition of Land for Industrial Purposes Act, 1997—Land Acquisition for Public Purpose—Acquisition of land for the Morappur–Dharmapuri New Broad-Gauge Railway Line was upheld as being in furtherance of a public purpose—Held, individual rights must yield to larger public interest where acquisition is in accordance with law and fair compensation is provided—Courts will not interfere with technical matters such as railway alignment absent mala fides or patent arbitrariness. [Paras 6–7] B. Tamil Nadu Acquisition of Land for Industrial Purposes Act, 1997—Objections to Acquisition—Challenge based on alleged procedural irregularities and defective notification was rejected where the landowner failed to avail the opportunity of personal hearing—Any residual prejudice stood ...
(9) HIMACHAL PRADESH
Attempt to murder
A. Indian Penal Code, 1860—Sections 307 & 325—Attempt to Murder—Conviction under Section 307 IPC upheld where the injured eyewitness's testimony was found reliable and stood corroborated by medical evidence—In cases based on direct eyewitness evidence, absence of proof of motive is not fatal to the prosecution. [Paras 12–18, 34–36] B. Indian Penal Code, 1860—Sections 307, 325 & Section 71—Sentencing—Where the act and intention of the accused constitute the offence of attempt to murder under Section 307 IPC, separate punishment under Section 325 IPC for the same injuries is unwarranted in view of Section 71 IPC. [Paras 36–38] C. Evidence Act, 1872—Section 27—Disclosure Statement—A disclosure statement leading only to the rediscovery of facts or ...
(10) HIMACHAL PRADESH
Dishonour of cheque
A. Negotiable Instruments Act, 1881—Section 138—Dishonour of Cheque—Validity of Cheque—A cheque drawn on the erstwhile State Bank of Patiala and presented after its merger with the State Bank of India, beyond the validity period prescribed by Government and Bank notifications, was not a legally valid cheque—Dishonour of such cheque could not attract Section 138 of the Act—Conviction and sentence were accordingly set aside. [Paras 19–22] B. Criminal Procedure Code, 1973—Section 397—Revisional Jurisdiction—Revisional jurisdiction is confined to correcting jurisdictional errors, patent illegality, or perversity in findings—The High Court cannot reappreciate evidence as an appellate court unless the impugned findings suffer from manifest illegality or gross miscarriage of ju...
