Tag: Madhya Pradesh High Court

Breaking: Supreme Court Invokes Article 142 to Quash Rape Case After Accused and Prosecutrix Marry
Supreme Court

Breaking: Supreme Court Invokes Article 142 to Quash Rape Case After Accused and Prosecutrix Marry

In this judgment, the Supreme Court exercised its plenary power under Article 142 of the Constitution to quash an entire criminal proceeding, including the conviction and sentence, to secure complete justice. The Court reasoned that since the parties had married and were residing together, continuing the prosecution would be counterproductive. Consequently, the pending appeal before the High Court was rendered infructuous. Facts Of The Case: The appellant and the prosecutrix first connected in 2015 through a social media platform, where they developed a mutual fondness for each other. This relationship eventually progressed into a consensual physical relationship, which the prosecutrix later claimed was based on the appellant's alleged false promise of marriage. When the appellant sought...
Degree Name vs. Subject Study: Supreme Court Orders Reinstatement of Employee Wrongfully Terminated
Supreme Court

Degree Name vs. Subject Study: Supreme Court Orders Reinstatement of Employee Wrongfully Terminated

The Supreme Court held that employer decisions cannot be purely mechanical, insisting only on a degree's title while ignoring the actual curriculum studied. Relying on a committee report prepared without affording a hearing violates natural justice. Furthermore, an expert authority's eligibility opinion must be considered; ignoring it renders a termination order arbitrary and unsustainable. Facts Of The Case: The appellant, Laxmikant Sharma, was appointed on a contractual basis as a Monitoring and Evaluation Consultant in Madhya Pradesh's Public Health & Engineering Department on April 26, 2013, after responding to an advertisement that required a "Postgraduate degree in Statistics." He held an M.Com. degree, completed in 1999, which included Business Statistics and Indian Economic S...
Can’t Terminate Compassionate Appointment for Failing Exam? Supreme Court Orders Lower Post Instead
Supreme Court

Can’t Terminate Compassionate Appointment for Failing Exam? Supreme Court Orders Lower Post Instead

The Supreme Court held that compassionate appointment schemes must be interpreted liberally to fulfill their humanitarian purpose, and procedural rigidity cannot override welfare objectives. It distinguished compassionate appointment from direct recruitment, ruling that reallocating a candidate to a lower post without essential qualifications does not violate equality clauses if it preserves the scheme's beneficial character. Facts Of The Case: The respondent, Harpal Singh, is the son of a deceased government employee who died in harness on February 28, 2019. Pursuant to the Madhya Pradesh compassionate appointment policy, he was appointed to the post of Assistant Grade-III on September 11, 2020. His appointment order contained a specific condition, derived from Clause 6.5 of the governi...
Supreme Court Reins In High Court’s Review Power in Judicial Recruitment Case
Supreme Court

Supreme Court Reins In High Court’s Review Power in Judicial Recruitment Case

The Supreme Court held that the High Court exceeded its review jurisdiction by re-adjudicating matters already decided in the original writ petition. The Court reiterated that review is not an appeal and cannot be invoked to re-examine a contention merely because a different view is possible. The scope of review is limited to correcting errors apparent on the face of the record. Facts Of The Case: The Madhya Pradesh High Court issued an advertisement for recruiting Civil Judges (Entry Level) under amended rules that prescribed new eligibility criteria. The respondents, Jyotsna Dohalia and another, participated in the preliminary examination but failed to secure the cut-off marks of 113. Their writ petition challenging the result was dismissed by the High Court on May 7, 2024, which held ...