Tag: High Court

Supreme Court Overturns Death Penalty, Acquits Accused in Child Rape-Murder Case Due to Flawed Evidence
Supreme Court

Supreme Court Overturns Death Penalty, Acquits Accused in Child Rape-Murder Case Due to Flawed Evidence

This Supreme Court judgment acquits the appellants, holding that in a case based purely on circumstantial evidence, the prosecution must establish a complete and unbroken chain of circumstances conclusively pointing to guilt. The Court found the evidence—including motive, last seen theory, and DNA reports—to be unreliable, incomplete, and failing to meet the standard of proof beyond a reasonable doubt required for a conviction, let alone the death penalty. Facts Of The Case: On November 20, 2014, a minor girl went missing from a wedding function at Sheeshmahal in Ramlila Maidan, Kathgodam, Uttarakhand. Her father lodged a missing report the next day. After an extensive search, her body was discovered on November 25, 2014, in a forest near the Gaula River, close to the venue. The post-mor...
Landmark Ruling: Supreme Court Clarifies Scope of Judicial Review in Employee Disciplinary Matters
Supreme Court

Landmark Ruling: Supreme Court Clarifies Scope of Judicial Review in Employee Disciplinary Matters

This Supreme Court judgment reiterates the limited scope of judicial review in disciplinary proceedings. Courts cannot act as appellate authorities to re-appreciate evidence. The standard of proof is preponderance of probability, not strict evidence rules. Interference is only permissible if the finding is perverse, based on no evidence, or violates natural justice. The Tribunal exceeded its jurisdiction under Section 11-A of the Industrial Disputes Act by doing so. Facts Of The Case: The respondent, Ganganarasimhaiah, was a Sub-Staff employee at Canara Bank's V.G. Doddi branch. An investigation revealed serious irregularities, including unauthorized loans and tampering with bank records. Specifically, it was alleged that he facilitated loans for his wife and father without the man...
Lawyer’s Reputation Restored: Supreme Court Wipes Clean High Court’s “Professional Impropriety” Remark
Supreme Court

Lawyer’s Reputation Restored: Supreme Court Wipes Clean High Court’s “Professional Impropriety” Remark

The Supreme Court expunged adverse remarks made by the High Court against an advocate, holding that such observations could have been avoided. The Court considered the possibility of a bona fide omission by the counsel, who was not involved in the connected case, and ruled that the expunction of the adverse comments was warranted in the circumstances of the case. Facts Of The Case: The appellant, an advocate named Siddharth Gupta, filed a writ petition before the High Court of Madhya Pradesh on behalf of his clients. During the proceedings, he relied upon a decision of the Supreme Court in the case of Index Medical College Hospital & Research Centre. The Division Bench of the High Court, in its final order, made adverse observations against the appellant, noting that his conduct "bor...
Daughter’s Coparcenary Rights Upheld: Supreme Court Sets Aside Review Order
Supreme Court

Daughter’s Coparcenary Rights Upheld: Supreme Court Sets Aside Review Order

The Supreme Court held that the High Court exceeded its limited review jurisdiction under Section 114 and Order 47 of the CPC. A review cannot re-appreciate evidence or reverse findings as an appeal would. The order under review did not correct a patent error but substituted a view, which is impermissible in review proceedings. Facts Of The Case: The case originated from a partition suit (O.S. No. 192 of 2000) filed by Subramani against his father, Munusamy Naidu, concerning ancestral properties. An ex-parte preliminary decree was passed in 2003, dividing the property into two equal shares. The Appellant, Malleeswari, who is the daughter of Munusamy Naidu, was not initially impleaded in this suit. Subsequent to the decree, her father executed a sale deed in favor of the first respo...
Supreme Court Rules: High Court Cannot Grant Anticipatory Bail if FIR Discloses SC/ST Act Offence
Supreme Court

Supreme Court Rules: High Court Cannot Grant Anticipatory Bail if FIR Discloses SC/ST Act Offence

The Supreme Court held that Section 18 of the SC/ST Act creates a statutory bar against granting anticipatory bail when a prima facie case under the Act is made out from the FIR. The court's role at this stage is limited to verifying the FIR's averments and cannot extend to a mini-trial or appreciation of evidence. The High Court erred in disregarding this bar. Facts Of The Case: The complainant, belonging to the "Mang" Scheduled Caste community, lodged an FIR alleging that on 25.11.2024, the accused, Rajkumar Jain and others, confronted him outside his home. The accused were angered because the complainant had not voted for their candidate in the recent assembly elections. They verbally abused the complainant using the casteist slur "Mangtyano," beat him with an iron rod, and threatened...
Justice Delayed is Justice Denied: Supreme Court Orders Strict Timelines for Pronouncing Judgments
Supreme Court

Justice Delayed is Justice Denied: Supreme Court Orders Strict Timelines for Pronouncing Judgments

This Supreme Court judgment reiterates the legal imperative for timely pronouncement of reserved judgments to uphold the right to speedy justice. The Supreme Court directed all High Courts to strictly adhere to the guidelines established in Anil Rai v. State of Bihar, mandating a monitoring mechanism by the Registrar General and the Chief Justice to ensure judgments are delivered within three months of being reserved. Facts Of The Case: The appellant, the de-facto complainant in the case, challenged interim orders from the High Court of Judicature at Allahabad concerning a long-pending criminal appeal filed by respondent no. 2 in 2008. The core grievance was the inordinate delay in the High Court's disposal of this criminal appeal. The appeal had initially been heard at length by a Div...
Supreme Court Landmark Ruling: Legal Heir Can Continue Criminal Appeal if Original Victim Dies
Supreme Court

Supreme Court Landmark Ruling: Legal Heir Can Continue Criminal Appeal if Original Victim Dies

This Supreme Court judgment clarifies that the legal right of a victim to prefer an appeal under Section 372 CrPC includes the right to prosecute it. The Supreme Court held that upon the death of the original victim-appellant, their legal heir is entitled to be substituted to continue the appeal, ensuring the victim's statutory right is not extinguished. Facts Of The Case: On December 9, 1992, an attack occurred stemming from previous enmity. The accused persons, armed with guns, sharp weapons, and bricks, assaulted informant Tara Chand (PW-1), his brother Virendra Singh, and his son Khem Singh (PW-3). As a result, Virendra Singh died, while Tara Chand and Khem Singh sustained injuries. The specific roles attributed were that accused Ashok fired at Virendra Singh, accused Pramod fi...
Supreme Court Seeks Larger Bench’s View :Can a Serving Judicial Officer Apply as a “Fresh” Judge?
Supreme Court

Supreme Court Seeks Larger Bench’s View :Can a Serving Judicial Officer Apply as a “Fresh” Judge?

The Supreme Court referred to a 5-Judge Constitution Bench the interpretation of Article 233(2) of the Constitution. It identified two substantial questions of law concerning the eligibility of judicial officers with prior bar experience for direct recruitment as District Judges, and the relevant time for determining such eligibility. Facts Of The Case: The present batch of petitions primarily sought a review of the Supreme Court's 2020 judgment in Dheeraj Mor v. Hon’ble High Court of Delhi. In that decision, a three-judge bench had upheld rules that barred members of the state judicial service from applying for the posts of District Judges reserved for direct recruitment from the bar under Article 233(2) of the Constitution. The review petitioners, along with other connected writ petiti...
Supreme Court: Father’s Hearsay Statement Cannot Overturn a Dying Declaration
Supreme Court

Supreme Court: Father’s Hearsay Statement Cannot Overturn a Dying Declaration

The Supreme Court held that a High Court, in its revisional jurisdiction, cannot re-appreciate evidence to overturn an acquittal. It can only correct glaring errors. Finding no such error and that the dying declaration did not establish the charges, the Court restored the Trial Court's order of acquittal. Facts Of The Case: The case originated from an incident on June 14, 2005, in which a woman sustained fatal burn injuries in a fire at her marital home. Her husband (Appellant 1) and another accused (Appellant 2) were charged under Sections 498A (cruelty) and 306 (abetment of suicide) of the Indian Penal Code. The prosecution alleged that the appellants harassed the deceased and that the fire was a result of a deliberate act. The core of the prosecution's case was a dying declara...
Supreme Court Slams Trend of “Transfer Culture” and Baseless Criticism of Judges
Supreme Court

Supreme Court Slams Trend of “Transfer Culture” and Baseless Criticism of Judges

The Supreme Court reaffirmed that a lawyer's primary duty is to the court, not the client, especially when allegations scandalize the judiciary. Signing pleadings with unverified, scurrilous remarks against judges constitutes contempt. The Court emphasized that such actions, even under client instruction, violate professional ethics and the majesty of law. Facts Of The Case: In Transfer Petition (Criminal) No. 613 of 2025, the petitioner, N. Peddi Raju, sought to transfer his case, Criminal Petition No. 4162 of 2020, from the Telangana High Court to the Bombay High Court's Nagpur Bench. The primary grounds for this request were allegations of bias and procedural discrimination against the learned Single Judge hearing the matter. The petitioner specifically contended that his argu...