Showing posts with label COURT ORDERS. Show all posts
Showing posts with label COURT ORDERS. Show all posts

Monday, April 29, 2019

PIL plea on NEET frisking disposed of 

Staff Reporter 

 
MADURAI, April 29, 2019 00:00 IST

The Madurai Bench of the Madras High Court on Saturday was informed by the Central and the State governments that separate frisking enclosures were provided to check female NEET candidates. The submissions were made after a public interest litigation petition sought separate enclosures to frisk male and female candidates.

The court was informed that sufficient booths were set up to frisk candidates and those preferring to wear traditional outfits must have indicated their intention in their NEET application forms. Such candidates must reach the examination centres one hour before the reporting time for frisking. Candidates should wear light clothes, it was submitted.

Recording the submissions, a Division Bench of Justices P.N. Prakash and B. Pugalendhi disposed of the petition filed by advocate B. Ramkumar Adityan from Thoothukudi.
Government servant not eligible to make will of family pension, says Chhattisgarh HC

TNN | Apr 29, 2019, 01.26 PM ISTRAIPUR:


The Chhattisgarh high court has held that a government servant is not eligible to make a will of his or her family pension since it has to be disbursed as per the pension rules.

Allowing a revision petition filed by one Samunda Bai, first wife of late Vijay Kumar Kaushik - who was working as a head constable in Janjgir-Champa - the bench of Justice Sanjay K Agrawal said in his order that the family pension do not form part of the estate of the deceased. The deceased had no right to make testamentary disposition with regard to family pension in favour of any family member. Samunda Bai along with her son Sudhir Kumar Kaushik had moved the high court after challenging an order passed by the lower courts, rejecting their application for grant of succession certificate in their favour.

Stating the brief facts of the case, the high court, in its order, mentioned that the petitioners Samunda Bai and her son and the private respondents of the case including Kanti Bai - the second wife of the deceased - and her three sons, have claimed amount of dues including provident fund, gratuity, leave encashment, pension, family benefit fund, ex gratia amount and police welfare amount for which the competent authority directed them to produce succession certificate.

The petitioners stated that Samunda Bai, being the first and legally wedded wife of deceased Vijay Kumar, is entitled for all pension benefits and it cannot be bequeathed by way of will, the order said.

Referring to the guiding principles and judgements made by the Supreme Court, the high court, in its order, said that the grant of family pension in the instant case is governed by Chhattisgarh Civil Services (Pension) Rules, 1976, which provides that the grant of family pension is restricted only to the family of the deceased and further, no nomination for grant of family pension can be made.

Thursday, April 25, 2019

Madurai Kamaraj University sex scandal case: HC summons Nirmala Devi for second in-chamber hearing
The All India Democratic Women Association had sought a CBI probe into the marks for sex scandal in the Madurai Kamaraj University.

Published: 24th April 2019 12:17 PM |

Assistant professor Nirmala Devi of Devanga Arts College in Aruppukottai

By Express News Service

The Madurai Bench of Madras High Court conducted an in-chamber hearing with Nirmala Devi, the prime accused in Madurai Kamaraj University (MKU) sex scandal case on Monday. This is the second such hearing conducted by the High Court Bench with Nirmala Devi.


A division bench comprising Justices N Kirubakaran and SS Sundar conducted the hearing on public interest litigation (PIL) filed by one Suganthi of All India Democratic Women Association (AIDWA) seeking CBI investigation into the MKU scandal.

The previous in-chamber hearing was ordered by the Bench to ascertain whether she was being denied legal aid. Whereas the previous hearing had taken place in the presence of the CB-CID Investigating officer, this hearing, the duration of which exceeded an hour, was conducted with the accused alone.
HC vacates TikTok ban, but red-flags its content

VIOLATIONS ON SOCIAL MEDIA ANGER COURTS IN TAMIL NADU

Srikkanth.D@timesgroup.com

Madurai:25.04.2019

The Madurai bench of the Madras high court on Wednesday vacated its April 3 interim order prohibiting downloading of video sharing app TikTok after the Chinese company submitted that it has moderating mechanisms in place to regulate obscene content and it is only an intermediary platform, which does not upload content.

A division bench of justices N Kirubakaran and S S Sundar warned that if the regulatory mechanisms were not found to be effective as stated by the company, it would be charged with contempt of court.

Senior counsel Isaac Mohanlal representing TikTok argued that the company followed all laid-down standards and had better privacy provisions than other social media platforms.

When senior counsel said TikTok had not violated any laws, the court said it is because we don’t have any laws to address the issues concerning social media platforms and cited instances where Parliament took several years to pass legislation.

The court also took note of submissions by amicus curiae Arvind Datar who said that banning the app, which is only an intermediary website, cannot be the solution and cited previous judgments of the Supreme Court and the guidelines of the Information Technology Act.

Courts should be the last resort, says Datar

“An intermediary shall not be liable for any data not uploaded by them. There is no obligation on their part for pre-censorship,” said senior counsel citing Supreme Court judgments.

The amicus curiae also said that he met with he officials of the ministry of electronics and information technology and, so far, the Union government had blocked 14,220 websites between 2010 and 2018 and that this was the first case in the country on an intermediary website.

Datar said any person with a grievance against an intermediary website should first approach the grievance official of the company and then the authorities and the courts only as a last resort. “What is statutorily legal cannot be judicially impermissible,” Datar said.

The court, however expressed concern that there was no statutory protection for children and asked whether the Union of India would enact a statute like the Children Online Privacy Protection Act, enacted by the United States, to prevent children from becoming cyber victims.

On April 3, the court had issued an interim direction to the Centre to prohibit downloading of TikTok mobile app.

The court observed that pornography and inappropriate content were made available through the app. The court directions were in response to a petition which sought a ban on the app stating that it encouraged disturbing content and degraded culture.

The court asked whether the government would enact a statute like the Children Online Privacy Protection Act, enacted by the US, to prevent children from becoming cyber victims
TIMELY ACTION

Morphing of girl’s FB pic: Man gets 3-yr jail

TIMES NEWS NETWORK

Trichy:25.04.2019

A mahila court in Trichy on Wednesday sentenced a 22-year-old youth to three years imprisonment for threatening a minor girl by posting her morphed photo on Facebook. It also handed out another threeyear jail term for intimidation and assault with intent to outrage her modesty.

The court also ordered the convict, S Ajithkumar, to pay a fine of ₹5,000 failing which he should undergo six months of additional jail term.

Special public prosecutor R Ventatesan said Ajithkumar, a construction worker, had proposed to the 17-year-old girl who was his neighbour.

Though the girl rejected his proposal, Ajithkumar continued to pursue her.

Since the girl was unrelenting, he downloaded her picture from her WhatsApp profile and morphed it with his picture, and posted the morphed photograph on the social media site.

The girl’s elder brother, who confronted Ajithkumar for denigrating his sister, was abused and threatened of dire

consequences. The convict also refused to remove the picture from the site.

Based on a complaint lodged by the girl, the Golden Rock all-woman police took up the investigation and arrested Ajithkumar, on September 26 last year. He was later released on bail pending trial.
SC seeks help of CBI, IB, cops to probe role of ‘fixers’ in judiciary

‘System Will Not Survive If Charges Are True’


AmitAnand.Choudhary@timesgroup.com

New Delhi:25.04.2019

The Supreme Court on Wednesday sought the assistance of top investigating and intelligence agencies to probe a “set of fixers” in the judiciary who allegedly seek to manipulate judicial proceedings and have been accused of conspiring with a corporate figure to frame the Chief Justice of India in a sexual harassment case.

The court took a serious view of the allegations after it was informed that two SC staff members who were recently sacked for altering an order in the industrialist Anil Ambani contempt case, acted in league with the dismissed woman employee who has accused CJI Ranjan Gogoi of sexual harassment.

Keen to swiftly settle the controversy arising out of a lawyer’s sensational claim that there is a “cash-for-judgment club” operating in Delhi to influence court proceedings, a special bench comprising Justices Arun Mishra, R F Nariman and Deepak Gupta called the heads of the CBI, the Intelligence Bureau and Delhi Police for in-camera consultations. The bench justified the decision stressing that allegations made by lawyer Utsav Bains that he was offered a bribe of ₹1.5 crore by a person named Ajay to frame CJI Ranjan Gogoi in a false case of sexual harassment and three dismissed SC employees ganging up with “fixers” was very serious.

“He says fixing game is going on in SC. It is a matter of grave concern for the system. Fixing has no place in the system. He has named a fixer and we want to go to the root of the matter. Fixers have to be booked. We need to find out who are these fixers. We will inquire and inquire and inquire and take it to the logical conclusion,” the bench said.



Our responsibility to keep this institution clean & ensure image is not tarnished: SC

Asking the chiefs of the CBI, IB and Delhi Police to reach the apex court for urgent consultations, the bench said, “We and this system will not survive if the allegations are true. We have to find out the truth at all levels. Can we keep our eyes shut? The entire country will lose faith in the system.”

The three top officers who met the judges were asked to “seize the relevant material” in order to support the contents of the affidavit furnished by Utsav Bains. “Considering the seriousness of the allegations as the system has absolutely no place for such fixers, we cannot leave the matter at that. It becomes our responsibility to keep this institution clean as well as to ensure that the image of this institution is not tarnished by such allegations to undertake the probe in the matter,” the court said in its order.

In the course of proceedings, senior advocate Indira Jaising contended that any probe into roles of fixers and a larger conspiracy should not hamper the in-house probe against the CJI on the sexual harassment complaint. The bench made it clear that in-house proceedings will go on but a separate investigation was needed on the larger conspiracy and role of fixers.

The lawyer contended that an attempt was made by a corporate figure to influence an SC judge to deliver a favourable order, failing which he sought to get the case moved to another court. Both attempts failed, Bains said, quoting what he said was information from a reliable source. The attempt to dislodge the CJI followed this incident, he claimed.

After their meeting with the officers of agencies they had called, the bench assembled again to hear submissions on an affidavit filed by Bains who alleged that the sexual harassment charge against the CJI by a dismissed court staffer was part of a larger conspiracy involving a corporate figure who, along with members of a “fixers club”, has tried to frame the CJI to pressure him to resign. He also placed materials and evidence in a sealed envelope before the bench to substantiate his allegations.

The lawyer said he had some additional information and evidence but expressed reluctance to place some of the privileged communication before the bench. The bench, however, said it is of the prima facie opinion that the lawyer could not claim privilege in the present case involving conspiracy of a serious nature. The court asked attorney general K K Venugopal to assist the court on the issue.

Full report on www.toi.in



In an affidavit, the lawyer alleged that CJI Ranjan Gogoi was being targeted because he took decisive steps to insulate the judiciary from fixers

Wednesday, April 24, 2019

பாலின மாற்று சிகிச்சை செய்தவரும் இந்து திருமணச் சட்டத்தில் மணமகள்தான்: உயர் நீதிமன்றம் தீர்ப்பு

By DIN | Published on : 23rd April 2019 07:19 PM |


சென்னை: பாலின மாற்று சிகிச்சை செய்தவரும் இந்து திருமணச் சட்டத்தில் மணமகள்தான் என்று சென்னை உயர் நீதிமன்றம் தீர்ப்பளித்துள்ளது.


தூத்துக்குடியை சேர்ந்த சிரிஜா என்ற பாலின மாற்று சிகிச்சை செய்து கொண்ட திருநங்கைக்கும், அருண்குமார் என்ற இளைஞருக்கும் திருமணம் செய்ய இருவீட்டாரும் பேசி முடிவெடுத்தனர்.

அதன்படி அவர்கள் அங்குள்ள கோயில் ஒன்றின் நிர்வாகத்தை அணுகிய போது, அவர்களுக்கு திருமணம் செய்து வைக்க கோயில் நிர்வாகம் மறுப்பு தெரிவித்து விட்டது. ஆனால், கடும் போராட்டத்துக்கு பின்னர் அவர்கள் திருமணம் கடந்த மாதம் நடைபெற்றது.

பின்னர் அவர்கள் தங்கள் திருமணத்தை பதிவு செய்யுமாறு கோரி பதிவாளரை அணுகியுள்ளனர். ஆனால் அவர்களது திருமணத்தை இந்து திருமணச் சட்ட விதிகளின் படி பதிவு செய்ய இயலாது என்று பதிவாளர் மறுப்பு தெரிவித்து விட்டார்.

இதனை எதிர்த்து தம்பதியர் சென்னை உயர் நீதிமன்றத்தில் வழக்குத் தொடர்ந்தனர். இந்த வழக்கு விசாரணையின் போது தமிழ் பாரம்பரியம் மற்றும் சம்மந்தப்பட்ட இரு தரப்பின் தனிச் சட்டங்கள் உள்ளிட்டவைகளின் விதிகளில் பதிவாளர் திருப்தியாகவில்லை எனில் எந்த ஒரு திருமண பதிவு விண்ணப்பத்தையும் அவரால் நிராகரிக்க முடியும் என தமிழக அரசு கடுமையாக வாதத்தை முன்வைத்து எதிர்ப்பு தெரிவித்தது.

ஆனால் இந்த வழக்கில் திங்களன்று தீர்ப்பளித்த உயர் நீதிமன்றம் பாலின மாற்று சிகிச்சை செய்தவரும் இந்து திருமணச் சட்டத்தில் மணமகளாகத்தான் கருதப்படுவார் என்று கூறியதோடு, இந்து திருமணச் சட்டத்தின்படி அவர்களது திருமணம் செல்லும் எனவும் உத்தரவிட்டுள்ளது. அத்துடன் அவர்களது திருமணத்தை முறைப்படி பதிவு செய்யவும் நீதிமன்றம் உத்தரவிட்டுள்ளது.
Interrogate all officials in the TNSRB examination row: Madras HC to CoP

DECCAN CHRONICLE. | J STALIN

PublishedApr 23, 2019, 1:49 am IST

Thus, the competent authorities are bound to take care of the report submitted by the chairman and proceed further in the manner known to law.

Madras high court

Chennai: Making it clear that all officials including the high ranking officials are to be questioned by the Commissioner of Police, Greater Chennai city, if necessary with reference to the documents and the materials submitted by the respective parties in connection with the alleged incidents leading to the Tamil Nadu Uniformed Services Recruitment Board examination row, the Madras high court has granted further time and directed the Commissioner of Police to proceed with the investigation.

JusticeS. M. Subramaniam said, "In view of the facts and circumstances and based on the report submitted by the Commissioner of Police, enabling him to conduct the investigation in a proper prospective so as to arrive a logical conclusion in order to initiate all further actions in the manner known to law, this court is inclined to grant further time. Equally, the report submitted by the Chairman, Tamil Nadu Uniformed Service Recruitment Board (TNUSRB) is also to be pursued in accordance with law. The chairman of the TNUSRB also initiated actions against the erred officials and certain other recommendations are also made.

Thus, the competent authorities are bound to take care of the report submitted by the chairman and proceed further in the manner known to law. Thus, the process of investigation as well as the further enquiry by the government, which are all to be proceeded with. Under these circumstances, it is just and necessary to grant further time to the commissioner of police as well as the chairman oof TNUSRB to pursue the matter enabling this court to decide the contempt petition".

In view of the fact that now the court has decided to monitor the investigation as well as the investigations led by the commissioner of police, this court is inclined to grant time and accordingly, the Registry is directed to list the matter 'for filing further report' by all concerned on September 6, 2019, the judge added.

Originally, contending that on account of wrong key answer to a question, ihalf mark was denied to him, S.Arunachalam, who is working as a constable and participated in the selection process for recruitment to the post of sub-inspector of police, had filed a petition. In order to find out the correctness of the key answer and to ascertain the genuinity of the claim of the petitioner, the court had directed the board to get an expert opinion from IIT Madras. Accordingly, based on the expert opinion, claiming to be obtained from a professor of IIT, Madras, furnished by the board, the court had dismissed the petition. However, subsequently, the petitioner claimed that the expert opinion furnished before the court was a bogus one. The Inspector General of Police and the Member Secretary of TNUSR Board stated that they identified some impersonation in the matter of providing expert's opinion to the board and in respect of such impersonation a criminal case was registered against G.V.Kumar and D.Moorthy. Following this, the judge had on April 2 initiated suo motu contempt proceedings.

In his present order, the judge said additional advocate general P.H.Arvindh Pandian submitted that pursuant to the order of the court, the COP initiated steps to accelerate the investigation in respect of the criminal case registered. The COP filed a comprehensive report in respect of the investigation done. The COP seeks further time to get appropriate report from the Forensic Department so as to get along with the further investigation and file a final report. Senior counsel A.E.Chelliah, appearing for Vijaya Kumar alias G.V.Kumar submitted that certain documents were created by the police officials of the Board by obtaining signatures in blank papers from G.V.Kumar. The signatures were obtained by force in the blank papers, when G.V.Kumar was in the office of the TNUSR Board. It was contended that by obtaining the signatures in blank papers, the officials of the police department put anti-date and filed the blank papers to suit their convenience.

G.V.Kumar was not at all in Chennai on that day and he had attended a program in Udhagamandalam. He produced documents to establish that he was taking classes in Udhagamandalam and the documents were to be verified and properly investigated by the COP. In this regard, the higher officials including IG of Police were to be interrogated with reference to the documents filed by G.V.Kumar. AAG in response submitted that the investigating officers will certainly look into those documents and initiate all suitable actions. "It is made clear that all the disputed documents are also to be scrutinized and investigated properly", the judge added.

The judge said this court was of the view that the CoP was entrusted with the responsibility of monitoring the investigation and therefore, there may not be any ambiguity or difficulty in interrogating all the officials, who all were connected with the issues. "This court has no iota of doubt and made it clear that no leniency or misplaced sympathy shall be shown in respect of all the persons concerned in the matter of investigation irrespective of their cadre, post or status. All concerned must be examined, investigated and interrogated, wherever necessary for the purpose of digging out the truth behind the incidents as well as the queries raised in the suo motu contempt proceedings", the judge added.
Transsexual is a bride as per Hindu Marriage Act: Madras HC

PTI

PublishedApr 23, 2019, 6:46 pm IST

The judge said the apex court had held that transgender persons had the right to decide their self-identified gender.

Quoting from epics viz. Mahabharatha and Ramayana, as well as from Supreme Court rulings, the judge said the word 'bride' could not have a static or immutable meaning and would have to include a transwoman. (Photo: File)

Madurai: In an important ruling, the Madras High Court's Madurai bench has held that as per the Hindu Marriage Act, a transsexual is also a "bride" and the term would not necessarily refer only to a woman.

Justice G R Swaminathan gave the ruling on a petition filed by a man and a transwoman who approached the court after officials refused to register their marriage held in Tuticorin last October. Allowing the petition, he directed the Registration Department officials to register the marriage of the petitioners.

Voicing concern over the plight of transgender people, who, he said, suffered from stigma and are forced to leave their homes, the judge directed the Tamil Nadu government to issue an order banning sex reassignment surgeries on inter-sex infants and children.

Quoting from epics viz. Mahabharatha and Ramayana, as well as from Supreme Court rulings, the judge said the word 'bride' could not have a static or immutable meaning and would have to include a transwoman.

He rejected the contention of the government advocate that the registrar of marriage had powers to refuse the registration as the couple did not meet the statutory requirement under the Hindu Marriage Act, as the term "bride" could only refer to a "woman on the marriage day".

The judge said the apex court had held that transgender persons had the right to decide their self-identified gender. Justice Swaminathan said it was the responsibility of the government to launch a sustained awareness campaign and encourage parents not to see the birth of an inter-sex child as a matter of embarrassment or shame.

"Any inter-sex child is entitled to stay within the fold of its family. The running away to the margins and beyond is a fatal journey and must be arrested. Time has come when they should be brought to the mainstream," he said.

In the present case, the petitioners were an inter-caste couple and eligible for financial incentives under the Dr Ambedkar Scheme for Social Integration, he said.
Register marriage between man and transwoman: Madurai Bench

The Court has also directed the Health Secretary to issue a G.O. prohibiting sex reassignment surgery on intersex infants and children.

Published: 24th April 2019 05:05 AM |

By Express News Service

MADURAI: The Madurai Bench of Madras High Court ordered registration of marriage between a man and a transwoman from Thoothukudi following a petition seeking a direction to the authorities concerned to register their marriage. The Court has also directed the Health Secretary to issue a G.O. prohibiting sex reassignment surgery on intersex infants and children.

The landmark judgment was passed on April 22 by Justice G R Swaminathan on a petition filed Arunkumar and Sreeja seeking direction to the Registration Department after the department ‘refused’ to register their marriage. The department stated that Sreeja, being a transwoman cannot be placed under the category of ‘bride’ as per the Hindu Marriage Act, 1955, and that the word ‘bride’ only refers to ‘woman’ on her wedding day.

However, Justice Swaminathan rejected the contentions by observing, “transgender persons who are neither male nor female fall within the expression ‘person’ and hence entitled to legal protection of laws in all spheres of State activity as enjoyed by any other citizen of this country”. Discrimination on the ground of sexual orientation or gender identity, therefore, impairs equality before the law, equal protection of the law and violates Article 14 of the Constitution of India, he added.

Referring to epics Ramayana and Mahabharata, he further held that the existence of a third category had been recognised even in the indigenous Hindu tradition. Hence the expression ‘bride’ occurring in Section 5 of the Hindu Marriage Act, 1955, would have to include within its meaning not only a woman but also a transwoman, he stated and directed the authorities to register the marriage solemnised between the petitioners.


Pointing out that one of the petitioners Arun Kumar belonged to a scheduled caste, the Judge also recommended that they can avail financial incentive under Dr Ambedkar’s Scheme for Social Integration through Inter-Caste Marriages. Justice Swaminathan also noted that intersex children must be given time and space to find their true gender identity. “But the parents make the infant undergo sex reassignment surgery (SRS), without providing them the opportunity (to decide),” he stated and directed the Health Secretary to issue a G.O prohibiting sex reassignment surgery on intersex infants and children.

Tuesday, April 23, 2019

Bogus report case: No leniency should be shown, says court
CoP Seeks More Time For Final Report


TIMES NEWS NETWORK

Chennai:23.04.2019

Rejecting the state’s request to close suo motu contempt of court proceeding initiated against the member secretary of the Tamil Nadu Uniformed Service Recruitment Board (TNUSRB) for filing a bogus ‘expert opinion’ in the court, the Madras high court on Monday made it clear that no leniency should be shown during the probe conducted by the Chennai police commissioner.

“This court has no iota of doubt and made it clear that no leniency or misplaced sympathy shall be shown in respect to all the persons concerned in the matter of investigation irrespective of their cadre, post or status. All concerned must be examined, investigated and interrogated, wherever necessary for the purpose of digging out the truth behind the incidents as well as the queries raised in the suo motu contempt proceedings,” Justice S M Subramaniam said.

The issue pertains to a plea moved by an unsuccessful candidate for recruitment to post of sub-inspector (fingerprint) conducted by the TNUSRB. Though the plea was dismissed on the basis of an ‘expert opinion’ produced by the board, later it came to light that the ‘opinion’ was bogus.

Taking serious view of the issue, the court initiated contempt of court proceeding against the member secretary of the board and directed the Chennai commissioner to conduct a probe and file reports to the court.

When the plea came up for hearing on Monday, the commissioner filed a comprehensive report in respect to the investigations done and sought further time to get appropriate report from the forensic department and to file a final report.

G V Kumar, a psychologist arrested in connection with the scam, submitted that the documents furnished by him are yet to be examined by the investigating officers and that certain documents were created by the police officers of the board by obtaining signatures in blank papers from him.

Recording the submissions, the judge said, this court is of the considered opinion that the commissioner is entrusted with the responsibility of monitoring the investigation and therefore, there may not be any ambiguity or difficulty in interrogating all the officials, who all are connected with the issues.

“It is made clear that all officials, including the high-ranking officials, are to be questioned by the commissioner, if necessary with reference to the documents and the materials submitted by the respective parties concerned,” Justice Subramaniam said and adjourned the plea to September 6.

In the meantime, another judge of the court granted bail to Kumar, who was arrested and remanded to judicial custody on April 1 by the Chennai CCB.



The issue pertains to a plea moved by an unsuccessful candidate for recruitment to post of sub-inspector (fingerprint) conducted by the TNUSRB

Monday, April 22, 2019

10 Important Judgments on Service Law in India

 https://www.vakilno1.com/legal-news/10-important-judgments-on-service-law-in-india.html

March 15, 2018
0
9225

March 15, 2018

Departmental Inquiry shall Conclude within 6 Months

Case name: Prem Nath Bali v. Registrar High Court of Delhi

In this case, the disciplinary proceedings, which commenced in the year 1990, continued for more than nine years. Pending disciplinary proceedings, the appellant sought revocation of suspension order but such representation made by the appellant was not considered.

The Supreme Court in the case took a strong note of the undue delay caused in disciplinary proceedings. The Court stated that due to such unreasonable delay, the appellant naturally suffered a lot as he had to survive only on suspension allowance for a long period of 9 years.

Other key observations made by the Court in the case are:

That it is the duty of the employer to ensure that the departmental inquiry initiated against the delinquent employee is concluded within the shortest possible time by taking priority measures.

That in cases where the delinquent is placed under suspension during the pendency of such inquiry then it becomes all the more imperative for the employer to ensure that the inquiry is concluded in the shortest possible time to avoid any prejudice to the rights of the delinquent employee.

That every employer (whether State or private) must make sincere endeavor to conclude the departmental inquiry proceedings once initiated against the delinquent employee within a reasonable time by giving priority to such proceedings and as far as possible it should be concluded within six months as an outer limit.

Where it is not possible for the employer to conclude due to certain unavoidable causes arising in the proceedings within the time frame then efforts should be made to conclude within reasonably extended period depending upon the cause and the nature of inquiry but not more than a year.

The entire case can be accessed here.

Delhi HC on Sexual Harassment at Workplace

Case name: Shanta Kumar v. Centre of Scientific and Industrial Research & Ors.

In this recent ruling, the Delhi High Court was confronted with an alleged case of sexual harassment at workplace.

The Court made following observations in the case:

That undoubtedly, physical contact or advances would constitute sexual harassment provided such physical contact is a part of the sexually determined behaviour. Such physical contact must be in the context of a behaviour which is sexually oriented. Plainly, a mere accidental physical contact, even though unwelcome, would not amount to sexual harassment.
That a physical contact which has no undertone of a sexual nature and is not occasioned by the gender of the complainant may not necessarily amount to sexual harassment.
That all physical contact cannot be termed as sexual harassment and only a physical contact or advances which are in the nature of an “unwelcome sexually determined behaviour” would amount to sexual harassment.

The entire case can be accessed here.

Departmental Enquiry on Vague Charges shall be Vitiated

Case name- Shri Anant R. Kulkarni v. Y.P. Education Society & Ors.

In this case, the Supreme Court made some key observations pertaining to disciplinary proceedings which enumerated below:

That once court sets aside an order of punishment on the ground that enquiry was not properly conducted, Court should not preclude employer from holding the enquiry in accordance with law. It must remit the case to disciplinary authority, to conduct enquiry from the point it stood vitiated, and to conclude the same in accordance with law. However, resorting to such a course depends upon gravity of delinquency involved.

Court/tribunal should not generally set aside departmental enquiry, and quash charges on the ground of delay in initiation of disciplinary proceedings, as such a power is de hors the limitation of judicial review. While setting aside a departmental enquiry, the Court must take into consideration all relevant facts, and balance and weigh the same, so as to determine, if it is in fact in the interest of clean and honest administration that proceedings are allowed to be terminated, only on the ground of a delay in their conclusion.

Departmental Enquiry on vague and unspecified charges – In this context, the Supreme Court held that a delinquent shall not be served a charge sheet, without providing him, a clear, specific and definite description of charge against him.

Departmental Enquiry against retired employee– In this case, the Court also enumerated the circumstances when departmental enquiry could be conducted against retired employee. The Court held that relevant rules governing the service conditions of an employee are determining factors as to whether and in what manner domestic enquiry can be held against an employee who stood retired after reaching the age of superannuation. Generally, if the enquiry has been initiated while the delinquent employee was in service, it would continue even after his retirement, but nature of punishment would change. The punishment of dismissal/removal from service would not be imposed.

The entire case can be accessed here.

Promotion available during Claimant’s period of extension of service can’t be granted to the Claimant

Case name: H.M. Singh v. Union of India, (2014) 3 SCC 670

This case dealt with service Law Promotion Entitlement to promotion during period of extension of service. In the case, the appellant’s claim for promotion to post of Lt. General was rejected on ground that he was on extension of service.

In view of the aforesaid, the Supreme Court held that in situations wherein an officer attains the age of retirement without there being a vacancy for his consideration to a higher rank, even though he is eligible for the same, such an officer who is granted extension in service, cannot claim consideration for promotion, against a vacancy which has become available during the period of his extension in service.

The entire case can be accessed here.

Non-Supply of Inquiry Report to the delinquent employee in disciplinary proceedings

Case name: Uttarakhand Transport v. Sukhveer Singh

In this case, the Supreme Court has primarily ruled on the legal principle of Non-Supply of Inquiry Report to the delinquent employee in disciplinary proceedings and the consequences that follow when the delinquent employee has not been prejudiced by non-supply of inquiry report prior to the issuance of show cause notice.

Key observations by the Supreme Court are enumerated below:

That Non-supply of Inquiry Report does not automatically results in Re-instatement of Delinquent Employee- When the employee is dismissed or removed from service and the inquiry is set aside because the report is not furnished to him, in some cases the non-furnishing of the report may have prejudiced him gravely while in other cases it may have made no difference to the ultimate punishment awarded to him. Hence to direct reinstatement of the employee with back-wages in all cases is to reduce the rules of justice to a mechanical ritual. The theory of reasonable opportunity and the principles of natural justice have been evolved to uphold the rule of law and to assist the individual to vindicate his just rights. They are not incantations to be invoked nor rites to be performed on all and sundry occasions. Whether in fact, prejudice has been caused to the employee or not on account of the denial to him of the report, has to be considered on the facts and circumstances of each case. Where, therefore, even after the furnishing of the report, no different consequence would have followed, it would be a perversion of justice to permit the employee to resume duty and to get all the consequential benefits.
That acts of corruption/misappropriation cannot be condoned, even in cases where the amount involved is meagre.

The entire case can be accessed here.

In Absence of Disciplinary Authority, Charge Sheet becomes Non est

Case name: Union of India v. B.V. Gopinath, (2014) 1 SCC 351

In this case, the Supreme Court in view of the facts and circumstances of the case, clearly stated that in absence of approval of disciplinary authority, charge memo/charge-sheet becomes non est and hence is liable to be quashed.

It was further held that all decisions regarding approval, modification/amendment, dropping of charge memo have to be taken by disciplinary authority for initiation of disciplinary proceedings. Hence, disciplinary authority alone is required to exercise that power, otherwise, it would go against established maxim delegatus non potest delegare.

The entire case can be accessed here.

7. Jobs Secured on the basis of Fake Caste Certificates to be Rendered Invalid

Case name: Managing Director FCI and Ors. v. Jagdish Balram Bahira and Ors.

Recently, the Supreme Court was confronted with a batch of petitions involving individuals who sought the benefit of public employment on the basis of a claim to belong to a beneficiary group which upon investigation was found to be invalid. In the case Supreme Court has rendered an elaborate explanation of usurpation of constitutional benefits by persons who do not genuinely belong to beneficiary groups.

The crux of Apex Court’s ruling in the instant case was that when a person who does not belong to a caste, tribe or class for whom the reservation is meant, seeks to pass off as its member, such a stratagem constitutes a fraud on the Constitution. Public employment is a significant source of social mobility. Access to education opens the doors to secure futures. As a matter of principle, in the exercise of its constitutional jurisdiction, the court must weigh against an interpretation which will protect unjust claims over the just, fraud over legality and expediency over principle

The Court broadly discussed the following issues in the case:

Whether a person who has secured the benefit of public employment or admission to an educational institution on a reserved quota is entitled to retain the benefits obtained despite the invalidation of the claim to belong to the tribe or caste?

Whether there should be a retrospective application of withdrawal of benefits secured on the basis of a caste claim which has been found to be false?

Whether the dishonest intent is a requisite for withdrawal of benefits secured on the basis of a caste claim which has been found to be false?

The Court at length discussed the proposition as laid down by the Supreme Court in the cases of Kavita Vasant Solunke vs. State of Maharashtra and Shalini Gajananrao Dalal v. New English High School Association. In these case, the Court ruled that candidates who honestly and correctly claimed to belong to a particular Scheduled Caste/Scheduled Tribe but were later on found by the relevant authority not to fall within the particular group envisaged for protected treatment would not be negated of the benefits already enjoyed by them and would continue in service. However, such candidates would be disentitled to claim any further or continuing benefit on the predication of belonging to the said Scheduled Caste/Scheduled Tribe.

The Apex Court in the instant case overruled the aforesaid finding of the Court and stated that the principles as settled in Kavita Solunke and Shalini case were not correct and might lead to serious consequences.

The entire case can be accessed here.

SC’s Guidelines for Employer in case of Suppression of Information by Employee

Case name: Avtar Singh v. Union of India

In this case the Court considered the cleavage of opinion in various decisions on the question of suppression of information or submitting false information in the verification form as to the question of having been criminally prosecuted, arrested or as to pendency of a criminal case.

The Apex Court in the case laid down the following guidelines for the employer and stated that any of the following recourse appropriate to the case may be adopted: –

In a case trivial in nature in which conviction had been recorded, such as shouting slogans at young age or for a petty offence which if disclosed would not have rendered an incumbent unfit for post in question, the employer may, in its discretion, ignore such suppression of fact or false information by condoning the lapse.

Where conviction has been recorded in case which is not trivial in nature, employer may cancel candidature or terminate services of the employee.


If acquittal had already been recorded in a case involving moral turpitude or offence of heinous/serious nature, on technical ground and it is not a case of clean acquittal, or benefit of reasonable doubt has been given, the employer may consider all relevant facts available as to antecedents, and may take appropriate decision as to the continuance of the employee.


In a case where the employee has made declaration truthfully of a concluded criminal case, the employer still has the right to consider antecedents, and cannot be compelled to appoint the candidate.

In case when fact has been truthfully declared in character verification form regarding pendency of a criminal case of trivial nature, employer, in facts and circumstances of the case, in its discretion may appoint the candidate subject to decision of such case.
In a case of deliberate suppression of fact with respect to multiple pending cases such false information by itself will assume significance and an employer may pass appropriate order cancelling candidature or terminating services as appointment of a person against whom multiple criminal cases were pending may not be proper.
If criminal case was pending but not known to the candidate at the time of filling the form, still it may have adverse impact and the appointing authority would take decision after considering the seriousness of the crime.
In case the employee is confirmed in service, holding Departmental enquiry would be necessary before passing order of termination/removal or dismissal on the ground of suppression or submitting false information in verification form.
For determining suppression or false information attestation/verification form has to be specific, not vague. Only such information which was required to be specifically mentioned has to be disclosed. If information not asked for but is relevant comes to knowledge of the employer the same can be considered in an objective manner while addressing the question of fitness. However, in such cases action cannot be taken on basis of suppression or submitting false information as to a fact which was not even asked for.
Before a person is held guilty of suppressio veri or suggestio falsi, knowledge of the fact must be attributable to him.

Compassionate Appointment cannot be claimed as a matter of right

Case name: Rajasthan State road Transport Corporation and ors. v. Revat Singh

In this case, the Supreme Court while relying on its decisions in the case of I.G.(Karmik) and others vs. Prahalad Mani Tripathi and Steel Authority of India Limited v. Madhusudan Das, held that compassionate appointment cannot be granted to a post for which the candidate is ineligible. It was further held in said case that even though higher post was applied for on Page 5 Page 5 of 8 compassionate ground, when a lower post offered considering qualification and eligibility as per rules was accepted by the candidate, he cannot claim higher post.

The Court also noted that the appointment on compassionate ground cannot be claimed as a matter of right. It must be provided for in the rules. The criteria laid down i.e. the death of the sole bread earner of the family, must be established. It is meant to provide for a minimum relief. When such contentions are raised, the constitutional philosophy of equality behind making such a scheme be taken into consideration. Articles 14 and 16 of the Constitution of India mandate that all eligible candidates should be considered for appointment in the posts which have fallen vacant. Appointment on compassionate ground offered to a dependent of a deceased employee is an exception to the said rule. It is a concession, not a right. (SBI v. Anju Jain, (2008) 8 SCC 475)

The entire case can be accessed here.

Departmental Inquiry is no Ground to Deny Pension or Subsistence Allowance to Employee

Case name: UCO Bank & Ors. v. Rajendra Shankar Shukla

In the case, the Supreme Court made a scathing attack on the Appellant Bank in view of illegalities in departmental inquiry against the Respondent Employee including the fact that the Respondent employee was denied even the subsistence allowance during the pendency of the inquiry against him.

In the case, the Bench considered the question of law on access to justice in a departmental inquiry. The Court opined that the Respondent was not given a fair opportunity to defend himself by denying him financial resources.

The Apex Court in the case held that an employee is entitled to subsistence allowance during an inquiry pending against him or her but if that employee is starved of finances by zero payment, it would be unreasonable to expect the employee to meaningfully participate in a departmental inquiry. Access to justice is a valuable right available to every person, even to a criminal, and indeed free legal representation is provided even to a criminal. In the case of a departmental inquiry, the delinquent is at best guilty of a misconduct but that is no ground to deny access to pension or subsistence allowance.
Judgments on Welfare of Senior Citizens
 
October 29, 2018 


https://www.vakilno1.com/legal-news/judgments-on-welfare-of-senior-citizens.html



October 29, 2018

Senior Citizens are an integral part of society. Their vast experience and teachings have always enriched families and societies. Since time immemorial presence of senior citizens in families have made relations healthier and stronger. However, recently there have been end number of incidents when senior citizens have been boycotted by their very own families and have been deprived of even basic necessities of life. Many senior citizens have also been forced to leave their own homes and seek shelter in old-age homes. In view of such adversaries, legislature had formulated the law Maintenance and Welfare of Parents and Senior Citizens Act, 2007 (Senior Citizen Act) and the Judiciary has also in the recent times passed verdicts which further strengthen their rights and position in society.

We have posted this article, so that senior citizens are aware of their rights and raise their voice in the event of any such atrocities inflicted on them.

Can Senior Citizens Evict Children from their Home?

Case name: Dattatrey Shivaji Mane v. Lilabai Shivaji Mane & ors.

In this recent case, the Bombay High Court while highlighting the object of the Maintenance and Welfare of Parents and Senior Citizens Act, 2007 (Senior Citizen Act) held that the Act permits a senior citizen including parent who is unable to maintain himself from his earning or out of property owned by him and if such senior citizen is unable to lead a normal life to apply for such relief i.e. eviction under Section 4 of the Act not only against his children but also the grandchildren.

In the case, the Respondent mother had filed a complaint against the petitioner (her son) inter alia praying for maintenance and eviction of the petitioner on various grounds. The Tribunal passed an order directing the petitioner and his other family members to evict themselves from the said tenement under Section 4 of the Maintenance and Welfare of Parents and Senior Citizens Act, 2007 (Senior Citizen Act). It would be relevant to mention here that the impugned premises exclusively belonged to the Respondent mother.

Aggrieved by the aforesaid order, the Petitioner instituted writ petition before the High Court of Bombay contending that since the petitioner has been allegedly maintaining the respondent no.1 for last several years, no order of eviction could be passed by the tribunal under Section 4 of the Senior Citizen Act.

The High Court of Bombay upheld the Tribunal’s order in view of the following observations: 


That the respondent no.1 has produced sufficient material on record showing that the respondent no.1 has been harassed by the petitioner and his family members for last several years. That Section 4 of the Act permits a senior citizen including parent who is unable to maintain himself from his earning or out of property owned by him and if such senior citizen is unable to lead a normal life to apply for such relief not only against his children but also the grandchildren.
While arriving at its decision, the High Court heavily relied on the case of Sunny Paul & Anr. Vs. State Nct of Delhi & Ors., wherein it was held that that the claim for eviction is maintainable under Section 4 of the said Act read with various other provisions of the said Act by a senior citizen against his children and also the grandchildren.
That the Senior Citizen said Act is enacted for the benefit and protection of senior citizen from his children or grandchildren.
That while interpreting the provisions, object of the Act has to be kept in mind which is to provide simple, inexpensive and speedy remedy to the parents and senior citizens who are in distress, by a summary procedure. Thus, the provisions have to be liberally construed as the primary object is to give social justice to parents and senior citizens.
With reference to the facts of the instant case, the High Court opined that the respondent mother could not be restrained from recovering exclusive possession from her son or his other family members for the purpose of generating income from the said premises or to lead a normal life.

In view of the aforesaid observations, the High Court directed the petitioner and other occupants i.e. his wife, son and daughter hand over the vacant possession to Respondent within 2 weeks.

The entire case can be accessed here.

Uttarakhand HC: Every Senor Citizen has Right to Live with Dignity

Case name: Senior Citizen Welfare Organization & another v. State of Uttarakhand & Anr.


In this case, the High Court of Uttarakhand while recognizing the failure of State to maintain adequate old age homes for the senior citizens in the State has issued a slew of mandatory directions.

In the case, the Petitioner is a registered Society who have instituted this petition with the object to protect the rights of the senior citizens as per the provisions of the Maintenance and Welfare of the Parents and Senior Citizens Act, 2007 (the Act).

The Petitioner in the case alleged that as per Section 19 of the Act old age homes is to be established in each district of the State of Uttarakhand. Section 19 ordains the State Government to establish and maintain such number of old age homes at accessible places at least one in each district to accommodate minimum 150 senior citizens who are indigent. However, the Respondent State has established only two old age homes.

The Two-Judge of the Uttarakhand High Court while taking a strong note of the prevailing situation made the following observations in the case: 


That according to the language of Section 19, the State Government is required to establish old age homes in each district and also to prepare a Scheme as per Section 19(2) of the Act, 2007.
That the State Government should establish the old age homes at its own level instead of relying upon NGOs or Societies. The State Government has to discharge the burden placed on it under Section 19 of the Act, 2007 and it cannot be permitted to pass on the responsibilities upon the NGOs for better management of the old age homes.


That it is the duty of the State Government to provide beds for all senior citizens in government aided hospitals. There is requirement of separate queues for senior citizens. The facility for treatment of degenerated diseases is required to be extended to senior citizens.
That every senior citizen has a fundamental right to live with dignity. It is the duty cast upon the State Government to protect the life, liberty and property including dignity and decency of senior citizens. They cannot be permitted to be left unattended in the twilight of their lives. Ours is a welfare and socialist state and it is expected that every senior citizen should live in a dignified manner with the assistance to be provided by the State Government.

The High Court in the case also issued a slew of mandatory directions for the establishment and maintenance of old age homes in India:

The State Government is directed to establish old age home in each district of the State of Uttarakhand within a period of six months. It is made clear that it shall be open to the State Government to hire private accommodation, as a temporary measure.
The State Government is directed to make a scheme for management of old age homes within a period of eight weeks from today as per Section 19(2) of the Act.
The State Government is directed to ensure to provide sufficient number of beds for senior citizens in each Government hospital or hospitals funded by the State Government.
The State Government is further directed to ensure that all the senior citizens in the State of Uttarakhand are provided free treatment including blood test, CT scan, MRI and other tests at Govt. hospitals.
The respondent-State shall upgrade the facilities to be provided in old age homes from time to time including the strength of the inhabitants.
The State Government is also directed to give due publicity to the Maintenance and Welfare of Parents and Senior Citizens Act, 2007 in print media, electronic media including through Panchayati Raj institutions for the awareness of the enactment as per Section 21 of the Act, 2007.
The State Government shall provide the facilities to the senior citizens as per the Rules.
The State Government shall provide separate accommodation for men and women including sufficient potable water, electric fans, coolers/ AC, separate kitchen, dining room, separate bathroom for disabled senior citizens.
The State Government is also directed to provide wheel chair, television, newspaper and books in old age homes.
The State Government is also directed to provide ramp railing to the senior citizens including telephone service.
The State Government is also directed to provide balanced nutritious food, two sets of clothes for summer and winters, linen, sufficient number of sweepers for maintaining hygiene and cleanliness in old age homes.
The senior citizens in case of emergency shall be taken to the nearest hospital for treatment. The cost of conveyance shall be borne by the State Government including the medical expenditure as well as of ambulance.
The Circle Officers of the respective area are directed to maintain vigil in and around the old age homes.
The State Government is directed to protect the life and property of the senior citizens as provided under Rule 20.
The Secretary, Welfare to the State of Uttarakhand shall be personally responsible to implement the orders and monitor the directions issued hereinabove.

Right of Senior Citizen over Immovable Property and Eviction of Abusive Children

Case name: Pramod Ranjankar & Anr. v. Arunashankar & ors.

In the instant case, the two senior citizens i.e. Petitioners alleged of physical assault and torture by their son and daughter-in-law (Respondents) by not providing them food, medicine and also confining them to a corner of their own house.

On complaint of the Petitioners, the JMFC took cognizance of the case and found that prima facie case is made out under Section 24 of The Maintenance and Welfare of the Parents and Senior Citizens Act, 2007 (Act) against the respondents. Subsequently, notices were issued to respondents and while such proceeding was pending an application was filed by Petitioner seeking interim relief for of the eviction of Respondents from the house. It was categorically stated that disposal of pending criminal case which is registered may take some time, therefore, the son and daughter should be ousted from the house to protect the petitioners.

However, the Lower Court held that when the petition filed under Section 24 of the Act was pending, ejectment cannot be passed by the Court.

Section 24 of the Act provides that whoever is responsible to care for senior citizen leaves such senior citizen with the intention to abandon him then he shall be punished.

Section 23 of the Act enumerates the circumstances under which a transfer of property by a senior citizen shall be rendered void on consequent misbehavior by the transferee.

Bench’s Verdict

The High Court of Chhattisgarh in the case directed the respondents to evict their parents’ house on the basis of following observations in the case:

Liberal Interpretation of Section 24- That reading of Section 24 would show that it started with opening words “the exposure and abandonment of senior citizen” meaning thereby the entire object is to protect the senior citizen. That having regard to the object of the Act and the intention of the legislature, there is no reason or justification or indication to restrict the meaning and scope of the word protection.

That reading of section 24 of the Act shows that it gives protection to the senior citizens in any place if they are abandoned and the said act is punishable with imprisonment of 3 months or fine thereby the person who intentionally abandons a senior citizen is liable for punishment. Reading of the above provision shows that it is intended to provide for a preventive remedy for the safety of senior citizen which can be granted quickly.

Transfer to be Void if Basic Needs to Transferor is not Provided- That a combined reading of Sections 23 and 24 of the Act would show that even if the property has been transferred by way of a gift or otherwise to the transferee, in lieu of such transfer of property the transferee has to provide basic amenities and physical needs to the transferor and if the transferee refuses or fails to provide such amenities and needs, the said transfer can be annulled.

That the object of the Act, 2007 calls for a simple, speedy but limited relief and seeks to ensure that the parents are not shelved as a commodity or a good under the scrap/heap of society and allow the children to sail on their immorality for their own subsistence.

Magistrate’s Duty under Section 22 of the Act- The jurisdiction conferred by Section 22 on the Magistrate is more in nature of a preventive, rather than a remedial jurisdiction. In view of this, it is the duty of the Magistrate to interpret the provisions in such a way that the construction placed on them would not defeat the very object of the legislation.

That in the absence of any express prohibition, it is appropriate to construe the provisions as conferring an implied power on the magistrate to direct the person against whom an application is made under Section 24 of the Act not to harm the senior citizen also.

That it is not expected that a senior citizen will run from pillar to post and the assault and abuses would be allowed to be continued in the same house till the petition u/s 24 is decided on merits.

Right over Immovable Property- The High Court also made reference to Supreme Court’s judgment in the case of Sunny Paul and another v. State NCT of Delhi, wherein it was held that the direction of eviction is a necessary consequential relief or a corollary to which a senior citizen would be entitled upon a transfer being declared void thereby the right over the immovable property, possession and ejectment thereof has been recognized which are incidental and ancillary.

In view of the aforesaid, the High Court while allowing the Petitioner’s interim application for eviction opined that the anxiety to stop the right of the abuse of senior citizen is to be made effective as otherwise it would be a symbolic collapse of the legal system by not responding to the request or by adhering to the dummy mode by Courts.

Sunday, April 21, 2019

Ponnaiah Medical College

TN gets to take a call on accommodating students of Defunct Ponnaiyah medical college

Apr 20, 2019, 3:31 am IST

Deccan Chronicle.

Nation, Current Affairs

In compliance with the order of the court, the MCI has made the present recommendation.

Madras high court

Chennai: The Madras high court has granted time till April 24 to the state government to respond to the communication sent by the Central government informing the recommendation of the Board of Governors in Supersession of Medical Council of India, to accommodate the 108 students of defunct Ponnaiyah Ramajayam Institute of Medical Sciences admitted during the academic year 2016-2017 in all the Government medical colleges of Tamil Nadu.

A division bench comprising Justices M.Sathyanarayanan and P.Rajamanickam posted to April 24, further hearing of the review petition filed by the state government.

Originally, on a batch of petitions from the students of PRIMS, a single judge had directed the state government to send a proposal to the MCI to accommodate the students in government medical colleges. Aggrieved, the state government filed an appeal and the bench had on February 1, directed the state government to submit a fresh proposal to the Board of Governors in Supersession of Medical Council of India for accommodating 108 students in 22 government medical colleges in the state. As against this order, the state government filed the present review petition and the bench had on February 13, directed the state government to send necessary proposal for accommodating 108 students both in 22 government medical colleges as well as 10 private medical colleges. The bench also directed the MCI and the Union government to act on the proposal and take a decision. In compliance with the order of the court, the MCI has made the present recommendation.

When the case came up for hearing on April 15, additional advocate general Narmada Sampath informed the court that the state government wants to take a call on the recommendation of the Board of Governors and sought one week time.

Opposing the same, senior counsel P.Wilson, appearing for the students submitted that even after the order of the single judge, the students has not attended the classes and they have less attendance. Originally, this bench had directed the state government to accommodate the students in government medical colleges. But, the state government failed to comply with the order and stated that it would accommodate the students only in private colleges. Thereafter, this court had directed the state government to send proposal to accommodate the students in 22 government colleges and 10 private colleges. Now MCI has submitted its recommendation to accommodate them in government medical colleges. How can the state government defy the present order, Wilson asked. The HC, after some more arguments, gave the State time till April 24 to reply, when it is likely to dispose of the petition.

Saturday, April 20, 2019

Right to travel abroad is an important basic human right, Supreme Court 

Shruti Mahajan April 19 2019

https://barandbench.com/right-to-travel-abroad-is-an-important-basic-human-right-supreme-court/


The right to travel abroad is an important basic human right and also extends to private life, the Supreme Court held in its recent order.

While hearing an appeal filed by IPS Officer Satish Chandra Verma, who was denied permission to travel abroad on account of a pending departmental inquiry against him, the Supreme Court Bench of Justices L Nageswara Rao and MR Shah held,

“The right to travel abroad is an important basic human right for it nourishes independent and self-determining creative character of the individual, not only by extending his freedoms of action, but also by extending the scope of his experience. The right also extends to private life; marriage, family and friendship are humanities which can be rarely affected through refusal of freedom to go abroad and clearly show that this freedom is a genuine human right. ”

The appellant is an Inspector General of Police/Principal, Central Training College, Central Reserve Police Force at Coimbatore in Tamil Nadu. Admittedly, there is a departmental inquiry pending against the appellant, on account of which the Central Administrative Tribunal (CAT) denied him permission to take a private trip abroad. This decision of the CAT was upheld by the Madras High Court.

The appellant, represented by Senior Counsel Indira Jaising, had apprised the Court that there were no criminal cases against him, and that the initiation of the departmental inquiry against him was under challenge. The Bench was also informed about the previous instance in 2017 when the appellant was granted permission to travel abroad by the Supreme Court.

The Court directed Additional Solicitor General Vikramjit Banerjee to take instructions from the Centre as to whether it had any serious objection to the appellant travelling abroad.

After placing reliance on its judgment in the case of Maneka Gandhi vs Union of India, wherein the right to travel was upheld, the Bench set aside the order of the High Court.

Thus, it was held that a pending departmental inquiry cannot be a ground to keep the appellant from travelling abroad. The Court found no reason for the Government of India to deny permission to the appellant, and directed the Centre to permit the appellant to travel abroad.
மனநல பாதிப்பா: துாக்கிலிருந்து தப்பலாம்

Added : ஏப் 19, 2019 21:55

புதுடில்லி, 'துாக்கு தண்டனையை எதிர்நோக்கியுள்ள கைதிக்கு, மனநல பாதிப்பு ஏற்பட்டால், அவரது தண்டனையை ஆயுள் தண்டனையாக குறைக்கலாம்' என, உச்ச நீதிமன்றம் உத்தரவிட்டுள்ளது.மஹாராஷ்டிர மாநிலத்தை சேர்ந்த ஒருவனுக்கு, இரண்டு பெண்களை பாலியல் பலாத்காரம் செய்து, கொலை செய்த வழக்கில், 2001ல், விசாரணை கோர்ட், துாக்கு தண்டனை விதித்தது. இந்த தண்டனையை, மும்பை உயர் நீதிமன்றமும், உச்ச நீதிமன்றமும் உறுதி செய்தன.அந்த நபர் தாக்கல் செய்த, சீராய்வு மனுவும் தள்ளுபடி செய்யப்பட்டது. இதையடுத்து, அவனுக்கு, துாக்கு தண்டனையை நிறைவேற்ற உத்தரவிடப்பட்டது.

இந்நிலையில், துாக்கு தண்டனைக்கு ஆளான நபர் தரப்பில், உச்ச நீதிமன்றத்தில், ஒரு மனு தாக்கல் செய்யப்பட்டது. அதில், அந்த நபருக்கு, மனநல பாதிப்பு ஏற்பட்டுஉள்ளதாகவும், அதனால், தண்டனையை குறைக்கும்படியும், உச்ச நீதிமன்றத்தில் மனு தாக்கல் செய்யப்பட்டது.இந்த மனு, நீதிபதிகள், ரமணா தலைமையிலான அமர்வு முன், நேற்று விசாரணைக்கு வந்ததது. அப்போது, நீதிபதிகள் உத்தரவிட்டதாவது:மனநிலை பாதிப்புக்கு ஆளான நபருக்கு, துாக்கு தண்டனையை நிறைவேற்றுவது, அரசியல் சட்டத்தின், 21வது பிரிவை மீறுவதாக அமையும். இப்படிப்பட்ட நபருக்கு விதிக்கப்பட்ட துாக்கு தண்டனையை, ஆயுள் தண்டனையாக குறைக்கலாம்.

மனநிலை பாதிக்கப்பட்ட நபருக்கு, கொடூரமான அல்லது வழக்கத்துக்கு மாறான தண்டனையை நிறைவேற்றுவது இல்லை என, சர்வதேச சட்ட அமைப்பில், இந்தியா, உறுதி அளித்துள்ளது.அதே நேரத்தில், துாக்கு தண்டனைக்கு ஆளானவர்கள், மனநிலை பாதிக்கப்பட்டதாக பொய் கூறி, தண்டனையிலிருந்து தப்பித்து விடக் கூடாது. சட்டத்தை தவறாக பயன்படுத்தி விடக்கூடாது.இது தொடர்பாக, தண்டனை விதிக்கப்பட்ட நபருக்கு, மருத்துவ நிபுணர்கள் குழு, உரிய சோதனை நடத்தி, உண்மையிலேயே, அந்த நபருக்கு மனநிலை பாதிக்கப்பட்டுள்ளதா என்பதை உறுதி செய்ய வேண்டும்.இவ்வாறு, நீதிபதிகள் உத்தரவிட்டனர்.

Friday, April 19, 2019

Girls having Freedom Similar to Boys- Court Strikes Down Discriminatory Hostel Rules for Girls 

March 18, 2019

Case name: Anjitha K Jose & anr. v. State of Kerala & ors.

In the case, the Petitioners, students of Respondent College namely, Sree Kerala Varma College have challenged instructions issued by the College pertaining to maintenance of discipline in hostel. The Petitioners in the case averred that the instructions issued by the college were in violation of the UGC (Prevention, Prohibition and Redressal of Women Employees and Students in Higher Educational Institutions) Regulations, 2015 as well as the fundamental rights of the students.

The excerpts from the instructions which were challenged are reproduced herein below:

The High Court of Kerala, while striking down some of the instructions made the following noteworthy observations in the case:

The Court while striking down instruction stating that no boarder shall take no active part in political meetings and propaganda opined that the instruction had nothing to do with the object of maintain disciple in the hostel and that it is the fundamental right of every citizen to take part in political views as part of freedom of speech and expression.


The Court while striking down instruction pertaining to boarders attending movies and pictures, the High Court observed that the moral choice of the management is attempted to be imposed upon the boarders. The moral paternalism is something to be frowned upon. A girl is having equal freedom similar to a boy. There are no similar restriction in the boy’s hostel.

The aforesaid observations made by Justice A Muhamed Mushtaq is indeed a noteworthy and progressive one and takes us a step further towards women empowerment in India. There are several institutions in India including some premier institutions and colleges which have different set of rules for girl’s hostel and boy’s hostel, wherein the rules regulating boy’s hostel are far more liberal as compared to that of girls. The primary duty of every institution or for that matter the State should be to ensure safety of women and not stifle their freedom under the garb of making rules to maintain discipline.
Service Law- Consistent Record of Good Performance to be Considered for Promotion- Kerala HC 

April 08, 2019

Case name: Hindustan Newsprint Limited v. T.C. Mani

The issue that arose for consideration for Division Bench of the High Court of Kerala in the case was whether the respondent who has retired from the services of the appellant as Executive in the year 2003 was entitled for promotion as Assistant Manager in the year 1997?

The appellant in the case alleged that the respondent was not fit for promotion in view of the one of the clauses of Appellant company’s promotion policy enumerating the criteria/eligibility for promotion. According to the Policy on being eligible for promotion, the first line executive in E-1 posts will be considered for promotion in their unit to the extent vacancies are available. If vacancies are not available, those with consistent Good record of performance will be considered.

The facts of the case noted that the respondent being an Engineering Diploma holder should have a consistent record of performance for a period of seven years in order to be considered by the Departmental Promotion Committee. However, the respondent had only a consistent record of performance for three years as performance of the respondent and was not ‘good’ consistently for seven years.

In view of the facts and circumstances of the case, the Division Bench of the High Court of Kerala denied promotion to the respondent in terms of the Promotion Policy and was of the view that the respondent did not have consistent record of good performance for seven years in order to be eligible for promotion.
Indian killed abroad, SC says examine doc who did postmortem

AmitAnand.Choudhary@timesgroup.com

New Delhi:19.04.2019

The Supreme Court has said that geographical distance should not come in the way of examining a witness in a criminal case and courts must take all steps to record the statement of a witness who resides in a foreign country and video-conferencing facilities must be used.

A bench of Justices A M Sapre and Dinesh Maheshwari directed a trial court in Rajasthan to take all necessary measures to ensure the examination of a Nigeria-based doctor in the case of a woman who died in mysterious circumstances in the African country. The woman’s parents have accused her husband of murdering her.

The woman was living with her husband in Nigeria where she was found hanging from the ceiling fan in her room in 2010. The first postmortem examination of the body was conducted by Dr I Yusuf who stated that the cause of death was “asphyxia secondary to strangulation”.

Pendency of case for about 8-9 years is not desirable: SC

Thereafter, the body was brought to India where a medical board was constituted for further postmortem examination but the board said no definite opinion could be formed regarding the time and cause of death.

The woman’s parents then filed a criminal complaint against the husband and alleged that she was being tortured for dowry.

After investigation, a chargesheet was filed against the husband for the offences of murder and cruelty. The parents thereafter filed an application to summon Dr Yusuf and said his testimony was essential to find the cause of death.

The trial court and the Rajasthan high court dismissed their plea and said it was not necessary to record the doctor’s statement as a copy of the postmortem examination report prepared by him had already been exhibited. The courts also took the view that the case was pending for eight years and recording the doctor’s statement would further delay the trial.

The Supreme Court, however, quashed the orders of the trial court and the high court said the doctor’s testimony was necessary to decide the case.

The court said since Dr Yusuf lived in Nigeria, in order to avoid inconvenience to him as also to the parties, recording his evidence through video-conferencing appeared to be a viable alternative.

“The trial court needs to take all requisite steps so as to ensure that his evidence comes on record with least inconvenience and/or burden to the parties and the witness,” the Supreme Court said.

“Though it is expected that the trial of a sessions case should proceed with reasonable expedition and pendency of such a matter for about 8-9 years is not desirable, but then the length/ duration of a case cannot displace the basic requirement of ensuring a just decision after taking all necessary and material evidence on record. In other words, the age of a case, by itself, cannot be decisive of the matter when a prayer is made for examination of a material witness,” the court added.

The length/ duration of a case cannot displace the basic requirement of ensuring a just decision after taking all necessary and material evidence on record — SC The court said since Dr Yusuf lived in Nigeria, in order to avoid inconvenience to him as also to the parties, recording his evidence through video-conferencing appeared to be a viable alternative

Thursday, April 18, 2019

சென்னை – சேலம் எட்டுவழி சாலைத் திட்டம்: தீர்ப்பு உணர்த்தும் படிப்பினை

Published : 17 Apr 2019 08:27 IST

சென்னை - சேலம் எட்டுவழி விரைவு நெடுஞ்சாலை உத்தேச திட்டம் தொடர்பாக நிலங்களைக் கையகப்படுத்தும் நடவடிக்கைகளை ரத்துசெய்து தீர்ப்பளித்திருக்கிறது சென்னை உயர் நீதிமன்றம். இத்திட்டத்தை முன்மொழிந்த முதல்வர் கே.பழனிசாமிக்கு இது அரசியல்ரீதியாக பின்னடைவு. இந்தத் திட்டம் தொடர்பான எல்லா விமர்சனங்களையும் தடுக்கவும், போராட்டங்களை ஒடுக்கவும் அவருடைய அரசு என்னவெல்லாம் செய்தது என்பதை நீதிமன்றம் சுட்டிக்காட்டியிருப்பதுடன் சாடியும் இருக்கிறது.

புதிய திட்டத்தால் சுற்றுச்சூழலுக்கு ஏற்படக்கூடிய விளைவுகள் என்ன என்பதை ‘இந்திய தேசிய நெடுஞ்சாலை ஆணையம்’ ஆராய்ந்து அறிக்கை தயாரிக்காமல், நிலங்களைக் கையகப்படுத்தும் நடவடிக்கைகளை மேற்கொள்ளக் கூடாது என்பது நீதிமன்றத்தின் இத்தீர்ப்பு மூலம் உணர்த்தப்பட்டிருக்கிறது. ஒரு திட்டத்தைத் தொடங்குவதற்கு முன் அதனால் நிலம், நீர், காற்று, உயிரினங்கள், தாவரங்கள் உள்பட சுற்றுச்சூழலுக்கு ஏற்படக்கூடிய பாதிப்புகளை ஆராய்ந்து மதிப்பிட்டாக வேண்டும் என்கிறது தீர்ப்பு. சதுப்பு நிலங்கள், செழிப்பான பண்ணைகள், காப்புக் காடுகள், நீர்நிலைகள் வழியாகச் செல்ல வேண்டியிருக்கும் நிலையிலும் மத்திய, மாநில அரசுகள் இத்திட்டத்தை விரைந்து நிறைவேற்ற முற்பட்டுள்ளன.

மத்திய அரசின் ‘பாரத்மாலா பரியோஜனா’ திட்டத்தில் இந்த எட்டுவழிச்சாலை திட்டம் இல்லவே இல்லை என்பதும் இத்தீர்ப்பின் மூலம் அம்பலமாகியுள்ளது. ‘பாரத்மாலா-1’ திட்டத்தில் ஒப்புதல் பெற்ற சாலைத் திட்டத்தில் சென்னை-சேலம் எட்டுவழி விரைவுச் சாலை இல்லை; ஏற்கெனவே ஒப்புதல் பெறப்பட்ட சென்னை-மதுரை நெடுஞ்சாலைத் திட்டம் ஏன் கைவிடப்பட்டது, இந்தத் திட்டம் ஏன் எடுத்துக் கொள்ளப்பட்டது என்பதை இந்திய தேசிய நெடுஞ்சாலை ஆணையம் தனது பதிலில் கூறவேயில்லை. சென்னை-திருச்சி-மதுரை நெடுஞ்சாலையில் சென்னை-சேலம் நெடுஞ்சாலையைவிட வாகனங்களின் எண்ணிக்கை அதிகம். இந்த மாற்றத்தை ‘கொள்கை முடிவு’ என்று அரசு கூறியிருப்பது சரியான விளக்கமல்ல என்று நீதிமன்றம் சுட்டிக்காட்டியிருக்கிறது. இந்தத் திட்டத்தில், தான் கடைப்பிடித்த நடைமுறைகள் எந்தவித சந்தேகத்துக்கும் அப்பாற்பட்டது என்று நீதிமன்றத்தை நம்பவைக்க மத்திய அரசும் தவறிவிட்டது.

இனியாவது இத்தகைய சாலைத் திட்டங்களை மேற்கொள்ளும்போது அதனால் சுற்றுச்சூழலுக்கு ஏற்படக்கூடிய பாதிப்புகள், கிராமப்புறங்களில் வாழும் ஏழைகளின் வாழ்வாதாரங்களுக்கு ஏற்படும் பாதிப்புகள் ஆகியவற்றை மத்திய, மாநில அரசுகள் முழுமையாக ஆராய வேண்டும். மக்களின் கண் வழி வளர்ச்சித் திட்டங்களை முன்னெடுக்க வேண்டும்.

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