Wednesday, August 12, 2020

Committee to regulate e-passes will be set up, TN govt tells HC

Committee to regulate e-passes will be set up, TN govt tells HC

TIMES NEWS NETWORK

Chennai: 12.08.2020

Facing flak for its epass regimen, the Tamil Nadu government assured the Madras high court that it would set up a committee to regulate issuance of e-passes for travel.

Recording the submission, a division bench of Justice M M Sundresh and Justice R Hemalatha said, “We only add that the committee to be formed shall also address the issue of the bogus and misuse of the e-passes.” It said regulatory procedures must be followed to avoid such misuses, the judges said.

A submission to this effect was made by a government counsel before the bench when a related case came up for hearing before on Tuesday. He said the chief minister had also made a similar statement while addressing the media recently.

Directing the government to file a detailed response in three weeks, the judges then posted the case to August 27 for further hearing.

The court issued the interim direction on a PIL moved by P Sesubalan Raja seeking direction to the government to regulate and streamline issuance of e-passes.

He alleged that people who have to travel even within the state for their work or other pressing needs could not do so due to the difficulties in getting e-passes from the authorities concerned.

In most cases, application for such passes are rejected immediately even without verifying the documents attached and people who had to travel for medical emergencies were unable to get such passes, the petitioner said.

Such e-passes are issued only on three grounds – medical emergency, marriage and funeral. But in view of the alleged difficulties in getting epasses, particularly for work related travel, the Chennai Corporation recently eased the restrictions and added a few more categories to obtain the passes. The additional grounds would include workrelated travel and travel to attend job interviews.

Daughters born after 1956 have equal inheritance rights as those of sons: SC

Daughters born after 1956 have equal inheritance rights as those of sons: SC

But Can’t Question Property Disposal Before 2004

Dhananjay.Mahapatra@timesgroup.com

New Delhi:12.08.2020 

Putting the last nail on male primacy in division of Hindu ancestral property, the Supreme Court in a landmark judgment on Tuesday cleared the legal cobwebs to declare that daughters will have inheritance rights equal to those of sons from properties of fathers, grandfathers and great-grandfathers right from the codification of the law in 1956.

A bench of Justices Arun Mishra, S Abdul Nazeer and M R Shah ironed out the confusion arising from the SC’s conflicting interpretations of the amended Section 6 of Hindu Succession Act, which came into force from September 9, 2005. The bench said whether the father was alive or not, daughters born before September 9, 2005, too could claim equal right in inheritance. The three-judge bench also examined the retrospective application of Section 6 and ruled that daughters would get the rights from 1956 when the law came into being.


TN parties hail apex court order

TN parties cutting across political lines welcomed the SC order. While chief minister Edappadi K Palaniswami and deputy CM O Panneerselvam said the order will safeguard social justice, DMK chief M K Stalin called it a victory for his party. “Kalaignar (M Karunanidhi) introduced the law granting equal rights over ancestral properties to daughters on a par with sons in 1989,” he said. P 5

‘Rights of other relatives remain unaffected’

Justice Mishra in the 121-page judgment said, “The provisions contained in substituted Section 6 of the Hindu Succession Act, 1956, confer status of coparcener (equal rights in inheritance) on the daughter born before or after amendment in the same manner as son with same rights and liabilities. The rights can be claimed by the daughter born earlier with effect from September 9, 2005,” .

However, daughters, while claiming coparcenary rights, will not be able to question disposal or alienation of ancestral properties by the existing coparceners prior to December 20, 2004, as provided in the amended Section 6. The court also asked other coparceners in a Hindu joint family not to be alarmed by the judgment.

“It is only a case of enlargement of the rights of daughters. The rights of other relatives remain unaffected as prevailed in the proviso to Section 6 as it stood before the amendment,” the SC said.

The three-judge bench also examined the retrospective application of Section 6 and ruled that daughters would get the rights from 1956 when the law came into being. However, it clarified that the newly-conferred rights through the judicial interpretations would not be available to reopen alienation of ancestral property done so earlier through existing coparceners.

Coparcenary property is one which is inherited by a Hindu from his/her father, grandfather or great-grandfather. Only a coparcener has the right to demand partition of property. Share in a property increases or decreases by death or birth in a family.

Daughters become equal coparceners at birth even if born prior to 2005 amendment to Hindu Succession Act: Supreme Court

Daughters become equal coparceners at birth even if born prior to 2005 amendment to Hindu Succession Act: Supreme Court

The landmark ruling says that even if the father coparcener died before the 2005 amendment, the daughter would still have equal coparcenary rights to inherit her father's share in property.

Shruti Mahajan

Aug 11, 2020, 12:43 PM IST

The Supreme Court today held that daughters would have equal coparcenery rights in Hindu Undivided Family (HUF) properties even if they were born before the 2005 amendment to the Hindu Succession Act, 1956 and regardless of whethertheir father coparcener had died before the amendment. (Vineeta Sharma v. Rakesh Sharma).

In effect, the Court has ruled that the 2005 amendment would have retroactive effect in conferring rights on daughters who were alive at the time of the amendment, even if they were born prior to it.

A three-Judge Bench of Justices Arun Mishra, S Abdul Nazeer and MR Shah passed the verdict in a reference that was made in appeals raising the issue of whether the amendment to the Act granting equal rights to daughters to inherit ancestral property would have retrospective effect.

Recognizing the importance of conferring equal rights on daughters and sons, Justice Mishra, while reading out the operative part of the judgment on this reference said,

"Daughters have to be given equal share of coparcenary rights in share of property like the son."

The Court has stressed that the coparcenery rights are acquired by a daughter at birth regardless of whether the daughter was born before or after the amendment to the Act was effected. By virtue of acquiring this right at birth, it is not necessary for the father coparcener to have been alive at the time of the 2005 amendment, the Court has further clarified.

This right of the daughter can be claimed in light of the 2005 amendment and is curtailed only in case the property has been disposed by other means prior to December 20, 2004, a cut off date provided for in Section 6(1) of the Act.

The Court has held:

The provisions contained in substituted Section 6 of the Hindu Succession Act, 1956 confer status of coparcener on the daughter born before or after amendment in the same manner as son with same rights and liabilities.

The rights can be claimed by the daughter born earlier with effect from 9.9.2005 with savings as provided in Section 6(1) as to the disposition or alienation, partition or testamentary disposition which had taken place before 20th day of December, 2004.

Since the right in coparcenary is by birth, it is not necessary that father coparcener should be living as on 9.9.2005.

The Court further also held that the statutory fiction of partition that was created in the proviso to Section 6 of the pre-amendment Act was only for the purpose ascertaining the share of the deceased coparcener, judgment says. This landmark ruling also says regardless of the preliminary decree passed, the decree passed in appeals or for final decree ought to give equal coparcenery share to daughters as sons are given.

As regards oral partition of property, the Court said that the plea for oral partititon cannot be accepted as a statutorily recognised mode of partition given effect to by a duly registered document. The judgment adds,

"...in exceptional cases where plea of oral partition is supported by public documents and partition is finally evinced in the same manner as if it had been affected by a decree of a court, it may be accepted. A plea of partition based on oral evidence alone cannot be accepted and to be rejected outrightly."

Issue before the Court:

The issue raised before the Supreme Court was whether with the passing of the Hindu Succession (Amendment) Act, 2005, a daughter of a coparcener shall by birth become a coparcener in her own right in the same manner as the son. In other words, whether a daughter could be denied her share on the ground that she were born prior to the enactment of the Act and, therefore, cannot be treated as coparcener?

The lead case in this batch of appeals was a challenge to the decision of the Delhi High Court which highlighted the difference in opinion between benches of the Supreme Court.

In the current case, the Delhi High Court granted a certificate of fitness to appeal having regard to the fact that there are conflicting decisions of the Supreme Court in Prakash v. Phulavati, Danamma @ Suman Surpur v. Amar, and Mangammal v. TB Raju.

Contrarian View in precedents:

In Prakash v. Phulavati, the Supreme Court had held that “the rights under the amendment are applicable to living daughters of living coparceners as on 9-9-2005 irrespective of when such daughters are born.” In other words, if the coparcener (father) had passed away prior to September 9, 2005 (date on which the amendment came into effect), the living daughter of the coparcener would have no right to coparcenary property.

In Danamma v. Amar, the Supreme Court had held that the 2005 amendment confers upon the daughter the status of acoparcener in her own right in the same manner as the son. Thus, it confers equal rights and liabilities in the coparcener properties to daughters and sons.

Reference to larger Bench:

In November 2018, a three-Judge Bench headed by Justice AK Sikri had noted that the matter needed to be heard by a three-Judge Bench to settle the contradiction of views.

Supreme Court's landmark ruling on interpretation of S.6 of Hindu Succession Act

3-judge Bench of SC to reconsider Daughter’s Coparcenary rights after 2005 Amendment to Hindu Succession Act

Court's findings today batting for equal coparcenery rights for daughters:

The property inherited as coparcenary in a Joint Hindu Family or a Hindu Undivided Family is passed on through familial decent and held jointly. Prior to 2005, the conference of coparcenary on birth was only granted on sons, grandsons, and such leaving out the daughters from acquiring coparcenary rights, but this changed in 2005. While explaining the same, the Court also highlighted that only a coparcener has the right to demand partition.

The Court says that goal of gender justice was achieved when in 2005, Section 6 was substituted in the 1956 Act to make female heirs equal coparceners.

The goal of gender justice as constitutionally envisaged is achieved though belatedly, and the discrimination made is taken care of by substituting the provisions of section 6 by Amendment Act, 2005.

Supreme Court said

Delving into the statement of object of the amendment as well as the language used in the substituted section, the Court says that the aim of treating daughters at par with sons is achieved albeit with the restriction only as regards property that was already disposed of prior to December 2004 which is clearly laid down in Section 6 sub-section (1) in a non-obstante clause.

Retroactive vs Prospective:

When the provision was amended, it granted coparcernary rights on the daughter making her a coparcener "in her own right" in the same way as the son and this right took effect by virtue of birth. Explaining the same, the judgment elaborates,

"Though the rights can be claimed, w.e.f. 9.9.2005, the provisions are of retroactive application; they confer benefits based on the antecedent event, and the Mitakshara coparcenary law shall be deemed to include a reference to a daughter as a coparcener"

While a statute with prospective effect operates from the date of its enactment, a legislation with the retroactive effect would work backwards and also undo the impairment caused prior to its coming into force. This amendment too operates in futuro but by virtue of its retroactive operation, it confers rights on daughters from the time of their birth even if the birth took place prior to the amendment, the Court explains.

"its operation is based upon the character or status that arose earlier. Characteristic or event which happened in the past or requisites which had been drawn from antecedent events. Under the amended section 6, since the right is given by birth, that is an antecedent event, and the provisions operate concerning claiming rights on and from the date of Amendment Act"

Thus, effectively, it becomes unimportant whether the father coparcener was alive at the time the amendment was brought it or not considering the daughter, by virtue of this amendment, acquired the rights of a coparcener with the retroactive application.

Today, the Court laid down the law as regards interpretation of Section 6 of the Hindu Succession Act and thus, in light of this judgment directed for the pending cases to be disposed of expeditiously.

Tuesday, August 11, 2020

Only UGC can cancel exams, SC told

Only UGC can cancel exams, SC told

Dhananjay.Mahapatra@timesgroup.com

New Delhi:11.08.2020

The University Grants Commission told the SC on Monday that final year students enrolled in universities of Delhi and Maharashtra that have decided to cancel examinations due to the pandemic may face an uncertain future if the regulator refuses to recognise the degrees awarded to them without an examination.

The commission had asked all colleges and universities under it to complete final examinations by September 30. UGC told the SC through solicitor general Tushar Mehta that under the Constitution, UGC was the sole body authorised to take a decision on examinations and questioned the states’ authority to cancel final year exams. “If states decide not to hold examinations and promote students, and if UGC refuses to recognise the degrees awarded without examination, it is the students who will face hardship,” Mehta told a bench of Justices Ashok Bhushan, RS Reddy and MR Shah.

Hearing a bunch of petitions filed by students with intervention from states, the bench said the states claimed that they had decided to cancel final year examinations under the power conferred on them by the Disaster Management Act. “You (UGC) apply your mind to the play of DM Act on holding of examinations and we will hear the matter on Friday,” it said.

The petitioners have challenged the UGC’s July 6 guidelines directing all universities to complete final year examinations for 2019-20 by September. The Delhi government in an affidavit informed the court that classes in all eight universities in the national capital were completely disrupted due to Covid-19 and the option of conducting online examination was mulled but was found unsuitable because many students were unable to access the internet.

Full report on www.toi.in

Plea In Karnataka HC Against Holding COMEDK On Aug 19; Says It's A 'Manufactured Havoc For Students'

Plea In Karnataka HC Against Holding COMEDK On Aug 19; Says It's A 'Manufactured Havoc For Students': A PIL filed in Karnataka HC challenges the decision to hold COMEDK test by Consortium of Medical, Engineering and Dental Colleges of Karnataka (COMEDK) on August 19.The PIL filed by Adv Abdulla Mannan...

Ex-DU students can get digital degrees

Ex-DU students can get digital degrees

TIMES NEWS NETWORK

New Delhi:11.08.2020

In a big relief to ex-Delhi University students who still haven’t received their degrees, DU has started an online portal to issue digital degrees.

The university informed the high court on Monday that the students only need to register on the online portal (www.digicerti.du.ac.in) and give their details, including academic qualifications and name of their college. Once the details are verified, the digital degrees will be issued within a week, the varsity told justice Prathiba M Singh. She was hearing various petitions by 21 doctors who completed MBBS graduation in 2018 and 2019 from DU-affiliated colleges, but have not yet received their degrees on the ground that the contract with the printer had expired.

The high court directed the university that digital degrees for all the doctors who moved the court should be issued by email on or before August 13, as they wish to apply for their residency programmes in the United States and to sit in the United States Medical Licensing Examination.

The court had earlier asked DU to come up with a sample digital degree.

“The court has perused the digital degree, which has been sent by email and it is satisfied with its content. The issuance of similar digital degree certificates duly verified by two officials of the DU and digitally signed by the authorised officer of the DU would, in the court’s opinion, satisfy the purpose of the petitioners,” Justice Singh said.

The court said that the doctors can use the digital degrees for the purpose of their ECFMG applications and if the ECFMG authorities need any clarification, they may be addressed to the email IDs of DU officials Sanjeev Singh or Vinay Gupta. It also asked DU to examine if marksheets and transcripts of students can be issued digitally too and listed the matter for further hearing on September 7.

DU officials told the court that data of all the students who have graduated up till November 2019 is available with the varsity.

Times View

Covid-19 has forced changes in every aspect of our life. Technology has been an ally in our efforts to find a way out of the mess. Granting digital degree certificates is a timely move because it helps us maintain social distancing while allowing us to move ahead with our lives.

152 illegally appointed faculty in Pachaiyappa’s Trust colleges Board Issues Notices To The Appointees

152 illegally appointed faculty in Pachaiyappa’s Trust colleges
Board Issues Notices To The Appointees

Ragu.Raman@timesgroup.com

Chennai:11.08.2020

At least 152 out of 234 faculty members, appointed to six colleges under the Pachaiyappa’s Trust Board were unqualified for the post, and hence the board has now issued notices to the illegal appointees asking why their recruitment should not be cancelled. The appointments were made between 2014 and 2016.

“Only 60 of the total 234 candidates were qualified candidates,” board chairman Justice P Shanmugam said in the notice. Notices have been slapped only on 152, as the remaining 22 have moved courts against their removal. “The illegal selection betrayed the Tamil Nadu government, UGC, universities, education departments and the public confidence and the reputation to the name of Pachaiyappa’s. The continuance of illegal appointees will misguide and set a bad precedent, as it is a blot on the fair and equal selection and morale of the students and society for generations,” Justice Shanmugam said in the notice. They were appointed as assistant professors, librarians and physical education directors in Pachaiyappa’s College; C Kandaswamy Naidu College for Men; Chellammal College for Women (all in Chennai); Pachaiyappa’s College for Men; Pachaiyappa’s College for Women (both in Kancheepuram) and C Kandaswamy Naidu College for Women in Cuddalore.

Candidates with correspondence or distance mode degrees, UG and PG degrees with cross majors and those without mandatory qualifications like NET, SLET or PhD were appointed as faculty members.

Violations came to light after complaints against selected names

Assistant professors with nil experience have been awarded the maximum marks of 14. In some cases, teaching experiences were taken into account without reference to the date of acquiring minimum educational qualification.

“The selection and the appointment made in the light of lack of educational qualifications, experience and other basic requirements are patently illegal and liable to be canceled on the ground that the candidates have failed to satisfy as UGC prescribed qualifications,” the notice said.

More than 4,300 candidates responded to job notifications and about 2,000 attended the interview during the period. Following complaints in final selection, the trust board checked the applications of selected candidates and was shocked to find gross violations of rules by the trustees in the appointment of faculty members.

“Illegalities in the selection have denied hundreds of deserving candidates their right of equality and proper selection and appointment. The education of thousands of students coming from economically weaker sections for whose benefit the public trust was conceived by Pachaiyappa have been compromised,” the notice further said.

The notice said it is proposed to cancel the appointments of 152 candidates and directed the concerned to show-cause as to why their selection and appointments should not be canceled within seven days from the receipt of the notice.

When contacted, Justice P Shanmugam confirmed issuing show-cause notice to 152 ineligible faculty members.

The continuance of illegal appointees will misguide and set a bad precedent, as it is a blot on the fair and equal selection and morale of the students and society for generations

Justice Shanmugam,

Pachaiyappa’s Trust Board chairman

NEWS TODAY 26.01.2026