Thursday, December 23, 2010

BCI Suspends Inspections for Three Months


Hit by a bribery scandal allegedly involving two of its key members - its Chennai-based vice-chairman Dhanpal Raj and member Rajinder Singh Rana -- the Bar Council of India (BCI) on Tuesday decided to suspend inspections of law colleges across the country for the next three months. This and some other drastic decisions came on a day when the CBI announced a recovery of Rs 75 lakh during the raids at the residence of Dhanpal Raj.

The BCI, the apex regulator for the legal profession and education in the country, in its emergency meeting on Tuesday night decided to form a three-member ombudsman body comprising top jurists to receive complaints from law colleges.

"The meeting passed a resolution to request eminent jurists Fali S Nariman, KK Venugopal and BV Acharya to be a part of the ombudsman panel to look into inspection-related complaints," BCI member Ashok Parija told HT.

"The meeting chaired by council chief Gopal Subramanium decided to keep a moratorium on fresh inspections for the grant of recognition to law colleges across the country for the next three months," Parija said.

BCI will now conduct inspections only after the formation of a specialised inspections committee with fresh rules.

The regulator is also likely to seek an external audit of all the inspections done by its members during the last five years and blacklist institutions offering any inducement. “The modalities are being worked out,” Parija said.

Also, the BCI is likely to remove both Dhanpal Raj and Rana from the legal education committee.

On Monday, the CBI had arrested Rana for accepting a bribe of Rs 1 lakh for a favourable inspection report to Ghaziabad-based Global Law College. It has also arrested another lawyer Manish Tyagi, a member of the advisory board of the Ghaziabad college. He was allegedly dealing with Rana. Rana and Tyagi have been remanded to CBI custody for two days.

The CBI has seized 52 files of other inspection cases of colleges from the BCI office.

A Delhi police inspector is also under the scanner for having removed evidence from Rana's residence.

Nithari Killings: Koli Sentenced to Death Again

Source: Indlaw

A special CBI court at Ghaziabad awarded death penalty to Surender Koli in the Deepali rape and murder case. 

This was his fourth death sentence in as many cases out of the 19 serial Nithari killings which rocked the nation in 2006. 

Earlier, special CBI Judge A K Singh pronounced Koli guilty in the case of rape and murder of 12-year-old Deepali. Koli, the domestic help of Moninder Singh Pandher who was not proceeded against in this case for want of evidence, has already been awarded death sentence by the special court in three of 16 cases filed in connection with the rape and murder of children and a young woman at Nithari in the district. 

Like in other cases, body parts of Deepali were also found in a drain behind Pandher’s bungalow in Nithari in Noida, Uttar Pradesh. 

In the first conviction in the series of horrific crimes, Koli and Pandher were found guilty and sentenced to death in the rape and murder of 14 year-old Rimpa Haldar on February 13, 2009. However, Pandher was acquitted by the Allahabad High Court on September 11. 

Koli was also awarded death sentence for rape and murder of eight-year-old Aarti last year and of nine-year-old Rachna this year. 

Deepali’s case is the fourth of the 16 cases filed by the CBI in connection with the rape and murder of children and a young woman whose skeletal remains were found in Nithari in 2006. 

Of the total 19 cases, CBI filed charge sheets in 16 cases, while the remaining three cases were closed without trial due to lack of evidence.

Wednesday, December 22, 2010

Nursery Admission Criterion Challenged Before Delhi High Court

Source : Indlaw

A Civil Rights Group has moved the Delhi High court against the recent guidelines issued by the government for admission of children in nursery class in private-aided and un-aided schools. 

Appearing on behalf of the parents and Social Jurist, lawyer Ashok Agrawal contended that the guidelines issued by Delhi government on December 15 and by Union HRD ministry on November 11 were contrary to the Right to Education Act and, therefore, violated the fundamental rights of a child. 

The PIL petitioner said Delhi government's guidelines give a free hand to the unaided and private schools to formulate their own nursery admission criteria. 

He further said the guidelines are contrary to the RTE Act and would lead to further commercialisation of education at the cost of hapless parents and students. Similar guidelines issued by the HRD ministry on November 11. 

'Such kind of discrimination as suggested by the government is not acceptable to us as it defeats the very purpose of the Right to Education Act initiated by the government itself,' the petition said. 

The government cannot violate its own provisions and formulate another set of rules to favour some persons for commercial benefits, Mr Agrawal added. 

The PIL will come up for hearing on Wednesday.

Friday, December 17, 2010

Exhibiting Documents in Evidence : The Law

Justice R.C. Lahoti
Supreme Court of India
Justice R.C. Lahoti pronounced a landmark judgment, in Sudir Engineering Company vs Nitco Roadways Ltd., which deals with the entire law relating to the marking of exhibits and tendering documents in evidence. The Bench has held that mere marking of an exhibit on a document does not dispense with the formal proof thereof. The relevant extracts from the judgment are reproduced hereinbelow;

(6) Let me now look at the law. Any document filed by either parly passes through three stages before it is held proved or disproved. These are : First stage : when the documents arc Filed by either party in the Court; these documents though on file, do not become part of the judicial record; Second stage: when the documents are tendered or produced m evidence by a party and the Court admits the documents in evidence. A .document admitted in evidence becomes a part of the judicial record of the case and constitutes evidenee. Third stage: the documents which are held 'proved, not proved or disproved' when the Court is called upon to apply its judicial mind by reference to Section 3 of the Evidence Act. Usually this stage arrives the final hearing of the suit or proceeding.

(7) Order 13 Rule 4 sub-rule (1) of the Civil Procedure Code provides as under :- 
4.( 1 ) ' Subject to the provisions of the next following sub-rule, there shall be endorsed on every document which has been admitted in evidence in the suit the following particulars, namely :- (a) the number and title of the suit, (h) the name of the person produced the documents, (c) the date on which it was produced, and, (d) a statement of its having been so admitted; and the endorsement shall be signed or initialled by the Judge. (2) xxx xxx xxx (Punjab & Haryana amendment) :- "Provided that where the Court is satisfied that the 'document, not endorsed in the manner laid down in the above rule, was in fact admitted in evidence, it shall treat the document as having been properly admitted in evidence unless non-compliance with this rule has resulted in miscarriage of justice." - Haryana Gaz., 11-6- 1974, Pt.III (L.S.) p.687." (underlining by me)
(8) I am firmly of the opinion that mere admission of document in evidence does not amount to its proof. 8.1Admission in evidence of a party's document may in specified cases exclude the right of opposite party to challenge its admissibility. The most prominent examples are when secondary evidence of a document within the meaning of Sections 63-65 of the Evidence Act is adduced without laying foundation for its admissibility or where a document not properly stamped is admitted in evidence attracting applicability of Section 36 of Stamp Act. 8.2 But the right of a party disputing the document to argue that the document was not proved will not he taken away merely because it had not objected to the admissibility of the document. The most instructive example is of a Will. It is a document required by law to he attested and its execution has to he proved in the manner contemplated by Section 68 of the Evidence Act read with Section 63 of the Succession Act. The party challenging the Will shall not be excluded from demonstrating at the final hearing that the execution of the Will, though exhibited, was not proved is statutorily required.

(9) The law laid down by the Supreme Court in Sait Taraji Khimechand VS. Yelamarti Satvam is :- 'The mere marking of an exhibit does not dispense with the proof of documents'

(10) Two Division Benches of Lahore High Court Ferozchin VS. Nawnb Khan, Air 1928 Lahore 432 and Hari Singh VS. Firm Karam Chand, Air 1927 Lahore 115 have clearly held that the admission of documents under Order 13 Rule 4 Civil Procedure Code does not bind the parties and unproved documents cannot be regarded as proved nor do they become evidence in the case without formal proof

(11) I have looked into the provisions of Delhi High Court (Original Side) Rules 1967 also. Chapter Xiii Rule 3 provides for documents admitted in evidence being numbered in such manner as the Court may direct. 11.1 There is an Original Side Practice Direction (No.3 of 1974), which vide puras 6 and 7 provides :- 6. The Court Master of the Court shall lake charge of every document or object put in as an exhibit during the trial of any case and shall mark or label every exhibit with a letter or letters indicating the parly by whom the exhibit is put in or the witness by whom it is proved, and with a number, so than all exhibits put in by a party, or proved by a witness, arc numbered in one consecutive scries. 7. The Court Master .of the Court shall examine all documents produced or offered in evidence and bring any apparent insufficiency of the court fee or other stamps to the notice of the Judge for orders. He shall endorse all documents admitted in evidence and all documents rejected with the particulars required by law and sign or initial such endorsement. (underlining by me) 11.2 A bare reading of this Practice Direction shows that it is not artistically drafted 'Proved' as used in para 6. is nothing else except used loosely for 'put in' 'produced' or 'tendered'. After all the question of proof is not answered by Court during the statement of witnesses simultaneously with production of documents nor does the Court Master decide upon proof of documents. Para 7 makes it clear that endorsement file by the Court Master of exhibit number, on a document is 'admission in evidence' and not proof of a document.

(12) In Baldeo Sahai VS. Ram Chander & Ors., Air 1931 Lahore 546 it was said :- 
"There are two stages relating to documents. One is the stage when all the documents on which the parties rely are filed by them in Court. The next stage is when the documents 'MC. proved and formally tendered in evidence. It is at this later stage that the Court has to decide whether they should be admitted or rejected. If they are admitted and proved then the seal of the Court is put on them giving certain details laid down by law, otherwise the documents are resumed to the party who produced them with an endorsement thereon to that effect." A reading of the report shows that it was the practice of the Court to endorse the documents soon on their filing which practice was deprecated and hence slopped. The word "proved" has been used by the Division Bench in the sense of 'proposed to be proved' as is clear from its having been used Along with the word 'tendered' or "admitted" in evidence. The word proved has been loosely used for describing the stage after fling of the documents, when the Court would decide only whether they should be admitted or rejected. The Division Bench cannot be read as holding that the document is not to be endorsed with an Exhibit number unless and until proved. As staled in para 6 hereinabove, the stages of tendering/admitting/rejecting in evidence and holding a document proved - are two distinct and different stages, not one. They are respectively the second and third stages
(13) Admission of a document in evidence is not to be confused with proof of a document.

(14) When the Court is called upon to examine the admissibility of a document it concentrates only on the document. When called upon to form a judicial opinion whether a document has been proved, disproved or not proved the Court would look not at the document alone or only at the statement of the witness standing in the box; it would take into consideration probabilities of the case as emerging from the whole record. It could not have been intendment of any law, rule or practice direction to expect the Court applying its judicial mind to the entire record of the case, each lime a document was placed before it for being exhibited and form an opinion if it was proved before marking it as an exhibit.

(15) The marking of a document as an exhibit, be it in any manner whatsoever either by use of alphabets or by use of numbers, is only for the purpose of identification. While reading the record the parties and the Court should be able to know which was I he document before the winless when it was deposing. Absence of putting an endorsement for the purpose of identification no sooner a document is placed before a witness would cause serious confusion as one would be left simply guessing or wondering while was the document to which the witness was referring to which deposing. Endorsement of an exhibit number on a document has no relation with its proof. Neither the marking of an exhibit number can be postponed till the document has been held proved; nor the document can be held to have been proved merely because it has been marked as an exhibit.

(16) This makes the position of law clear. Any practise contrary to the above said statement of law has no sanctity and cannot be permitted to prevail.

(17) Every Court is free to regulate its own affairs within the framework of law. Chapter Xiii Rule 3 above said contemplates documents admitted in evidence being numbered in such manner as the Court may direct. I make it clear for this case and for all the cases coming up before me in future that the documents tendered and admitted in evidence shall be marked with numerical serial numbers, prefixed by Ex.P if filed by plaintiff or petitioner and prefixed by Ex.D if filed by defendant or respondent.

(18) Reverting back to the case before me, let the report of Notary Public be endorsed with an exhibit number by the Court Master.

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