Month: June 2019

Foreigners Act, 1946–Wrongly declared to be Foreigner—Once the grandfather’s identity, father’s identity etc. has been established successfully by the appellant then by the mere fact that the father may later have gone to another village is no reason to doubt the documents relied upon

2019(2) Law Herald (SC) 1503 : 2019 LawHerald.Org 951 IN THE SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Before Hon’ble Mr. Justice Rohinton Pali Nariman Hon’ble Mr. Justice Vineet Saran Criminal Appeal No.…

Indian Penal Code, 1860, S.304 Part-II–Culpable Homicide not amounting to Murder-Essential Ingredients-In order to bring the case within Exception 4 to Section 300 IPC, the following conditions enumerated therein must be satisfied: (i) The act must be committed without premeditation in a sudden fight in the heat of passion; (ii) upon a sudden quarrel; (iii) without the offender’s having taken undue advantage; and (iv) the accused had not acted in a cruel or unusual manner.

2019(2) Law Herald (SC) 1487 : 2019 LawHerald.Org 948 IN THE SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Before Hontde Mrs. Justice R. Banumathi Honble Mr. Justice R. Subhash Reddy Criminal Appeal No.…

Murder~Circumstantial Evidence-¬ Acquittal-Private Complaint-Death due to overdose of drugs-Amount of the offending substance found in the blood of deceased was equal to injecting 40 ml of tidijesic -Deceased and the accused were sleeping in one room—Prosecution failed to prove that accused injected drug to deceased

2019(2) Law Herald (SC) 1410 : 2019 LawHerald.Org 935 IN THE SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Before Hon’ble Mr. Justice Sanjay Kishan Kaul Hon’ble Mr. Justice Deepak Gupta Criminal Appeal No.…

You missed

Temple Bye Laws — Oachira Parabrahma Temple — Ancient structure without a building or deity, governed by Bye-laws with three-tier elected committees — Appellants, elected Secretary and President, challenged two High Court orders (2020 and 2023) that removed their committee and appointed an unelected one under an Administrative Head, citing violations of the temple’s Bye-laws and customs —Legality of appointing an unelected committee and removing the elected one contrary to the temple’s Bye-laws — Petitioner argues that the High Court overstepped its jurisdiction and violated the temple’s governance structure by appointing an unelected committee and removing the elected one without proper legal basis — The High Court’s actions were necessary for the efficient administration of the temple until a scheme could be framed and new elections held — The Supreme Court modified the High Court orders, appointing a new retired Judge as Administrative Head to conduct fair elections within four months, while directing all parties to cooperate — The Court emphasized the need to preserve temple properties and governance as per established customs and laws — The Supreme Court struck down the High Court’s order appointing an unelected committee, appointed a new Administrative Head to conduct elections, and directed all parties to cooperate, emphasizing the importance of adhering to the temple’s established governance structure and Bye-laws.