JECRC UNIVERSITY is organizing a NATIONAL MOOT COURT COMPETITION 2022.

ABOUT

Established with state-of-the-art infrastructure in the Industrial and Institutional hub in the Pink City of India, JECRC University is driven by the spirit of innovation-led research. This spells out both in our infrastructure as well as practices. JECRC is a multifaceted research institute that encompasses subject-specific exploration as well as contexts of the business environment in which our students operate and perform. JECRC is known for its strong research culture, close industry linkages, and corporate connections. JU has been established vide The JECRC University, Jaipur Act, 2012 (Act No.15 of 2012) published in the Gazette of Rajasthan dated May 2, 2012, and the University is approved by UGC. JECRC University has been recently accredited by NAAC (An Autonomous Institution of UGC) and JECRC has become the 21st University to be accredited by NAAC. These achievements have opened the floodgates of opportunities for the students studying in various courses in these institutions.

GENERAL INFORMATION

  1. These are the rules for the III JECRC Uttam Devi Mohanlal Khatuwaala Memorial National Moot Court Competition, 2022.
  2. The III JECRC Uttam Devi Mohanlal Khatuwaala Memorial National Moot Court Competition, 2022 will be held from August 13th to 16th 2022, at JECRC University Campus, Jaipur.
  3. The Organizing Committee (OC) shall function as the point of contact and any changes in the Rules of the Competition shall be notified by e-mail to all participating teams.
  4. The Competition shall be conducted in accordance with the rules mentioned hereunder. Participants are required to comply with the rules and procedures prescribed herein.
  5. The official e-mail for all correspondence concerning the Competition is ju.mootcourt@jecrcu.edu.in
  6. The students must be present in their formal uniform ie, a White shirt, Black trousers, Black Tie, and a Black Coat.
  7. Selection will be on a first come first basis as there will be limited seats.
  8. The language must be English in all the rounds.

ELIGIBILITY

Students of three-year or Five-year integrated law degree courses from any University/Law School/College/Department are eligible to participate in the Competition. However, a maximum of one Team shall be allowed to participate from any one University/Law School/College/Department.

TEAM COMPOSITION

  1. Each Team shall consist only of three members, comprising two speakers and one researcher.
  2. Any alteration of the names of the team members shall be informed through writing mail to ju.mootcourt@jecrcu.edu.in
  3. Once the Competition commences, the team composition cannot be altered under any circumstances whatsoever. The inability of any team member to participate in accordance with the rules of this Competition shall lead to immediate disqualification of the Team from the Competition.

PARTICIPATION AND REGISTRATION PROCEDURE

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The last date of final registration and payment is July 25th, 2022.

FOR MORE QUERIES CONTACT

+91 7895073317

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-Report by Rhea Mistry

On 27th January 2021, a judgment was passed in a writ petition case Mohammad Latief Magrey v. Union of India and others. In that case, Mr. Mohammad Latief Magrey’s son was encountered in the Hyderpora Encounter. An appeal was filed by the Union of India and others against the judgment.

The respondent i.e., Mr. Mohammad Latief Magrey had asked for his deceased son’s body in the initial petition. He had asked for the body to complete the burial rituals after the bodies of two other deceased who were encountered along with his son were exhumed and returned to their families. Challenging the decision of the judgment, the appellants’ had filed an appeal to the Jammu & Kashmir High Court.


The learned counsel of the Union of J&K put forward that the body of the deceased should not be returned to the family as he was a suspect terrorist and was killed in an encounter while he was attacking the area in Hyderpora.

The respondent herein presented that his son, Amit Magray, had been killed in a police encounter in Hyderpora, Kashmir on 15th November 2021. The dead body of the deceased son was not given to the family. This led to infringement of Rights to the protection of life and personal liberty as provided in Article 21 of the Constitution of India. The article gives the right to a decent burial of a dead body.

Mr. Mohammad Latief Magrey asserted that he and his family had been awarded for bravery in keeping the militants away from the area. His deceased son was also one of those who would fight against the militants. After having some financial crisis and not being able to study further, the deceased, Amit Magray, to support his family moved to his
sister’s place in Kashmir and started to work for Dr. Mudasir. Amit was working for Dr. Mudasir till 14th November 2021 and talked regularly with the family till then. After that, the family did not hear from him and had no idea of his whereabouts. They directly heard from the police station on 16th November 2021 that their son has been killed in a police encounter.

After reaching the police station, the father and family of the deceased were informed that their son was a militant and was killed with two others by the police force in an encounter in Kashmir.

The police Officials had buried the body of Amit Magray with all the rites performed and refused to exhume the body. They also stated the reasons for the bodies of the other two associates being returned was because it was revealed that one, Dr. Mudasir was killed by another foreign militant, and the other Altaf Bhat was killed during a cross-firing in the encounter. In the appeal by the Union of J&K, they contented that exhumation of the body is not possible as the body starts decomposing after its burial. The appellants did not take into consideration the family background and had fought against militants.

Following the parties’ pleas, the court ordered the Union of J&K to exhume and return the body of the deceased Amit Magray to his family in a speedy process. They were also ordered to pay a compensation of Rs. 5 Lakhs to the family of the deceased.

The learned counsel of the appellant asserted that the writ court failed to view the case from all the relevant angles and requested to dismiss the petition. The respondent had given up the request for the exhumation of the body so the court allowed them to perform Fatiha Khawani at Wadder Payeen Graveyard after midnight to avoid large crowds.

After taking into account and examining the situations and facts, it was held that the family would not be returned the body of the deceased but be permitted to perform their religious burial rites at the grave where the body is buried with a maximum of 10 people. The compensation of Rs.5 Lakhs payable to the respondents stands upright and this decision should not form a precedent for future similar cases.


As of the aforesaid, the appeal has been dismissed.

PCGT is organizing NATIONAL YOUTH PARLIAMENT 2022 on JULY 30 AND 31, 2022.

ABOUT

PCGT came into existence in the year 2002 when good and straightforward officers were being humiliated by the political leadership. Two of our future trustees, Dr. R. K. Anand and Mr. Dara Gandhy, filed a PIL against the proposed transfer of an upright I.P.S. officer. They succeeded in the Bombay High Court.

The idea of taking up cudgels on behalf of good and honest officers and targeting corruption as the main cause for the choices of the politicians was born.

ELIGIBILITY

All law students and policymakers.

DATES

30 & 31 July 2022

VENUE

Pravin Gandhi College of Law: 

8th Floor, Mithibai College Campus, Bhakti Vedanta Swami Marg, Vile Parle West, Mumbai, Maharashtra 400056

CONTACT US

BIANCA CHETTIAR (PRESIDENT) : +91 96195 78431

RACHNA VERMA (VICE PRESIDENT) : +91 82260 82269

https://www.pcgtnyp.org/register

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SATHYABAMA University is organizing 4 NATIONAL DEBATE COMPETITION.

ABOUT

Sathyabama is a prestigious institution which excels in the fields of Engineering, Science and Technology for more than three successful decades. It offers multidisciplinary academic programmes in various fields of Engineering, Science, Technology, law, Dental Science, Pharmacy, Nursing, Management, Arts and Science and Allied Health Sciences. It is established under Sec.3 of UGC Act, 1956 and is been Accredited with ‘A’ Grade by the National Accreditation and Assessment council. The Institution persistently seeks and adopts innovative methods to improve the quality of higher education and is responsive to the changes taking place in the field of education on a global scale.

OBJECTIVES OF DEBATE

  1. To promote the art of debate and eloquence among students.
  2. To provide a significant training ground for the development of students with regard to their communicative abilities.
  3. To create learning situations in which students develop proficiencies based on sound educational and communicational theories.
  4. To understand and communicate various forms of arguments effectively in a variety of context.

RULES AND REGULATIONS

  1. Participants are required to submit their Covid Vaccination Certificate (two doses) on their arrival to the venue of competition.
  2. Participants are strictly advised to wear mask and maintain social distancing among the fellow participants and the organizers.
  3. Participants are requested to bring their college ID (Identity) Cards with them.
  4. Last minute registration for participating in the 4th National Debate Competition will also be encouraged.
  5. Once the registration is completed registration fee will not be refunded.
  6. There is no restriction on number of participants from the same institution.
  7. The awards, certificates of merit and certificates of participation shall be given during the valedictory ceremony. No certificate will be given to the team before or after the valedictory function.
  8. All decisions by the organizers will be final and the organizers may make such as rules and regulation at any point as they deem fit.

Date And Venue

The 4th National Debate Competition shall be held on 08th of July at SATHYABAMA INSTITUTE OF SCIENCE AND TECHNOLOGY, CHENNAI.

TOPICS

PRELIMINARY ROUND: “Is India consistently fails the test of being a democracy”.

SEMI-FINAL: Whether New National Education Policy will bring revolutionary changes in the Education System?

FINALS: Is Agneepath Scheme a masked socio-political issue?

REGISTRATION DETAILS:

The registration fee for the 4th National Debate Competition is Rs. 200.

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IILM Law School Gurugram is proud to announce that it is organizing One Week Multi-Disciplinary Faculty Development Program (FDP) on The Multi-Dimensions of Justice: Law & Beyond from 18th July -23rd July 2022 (Online).

ABOUT

IILM Law School is organizing an online One week Faculty Development Programme (FDP) which aims to provide the participants a platform where they can acquire knowledge about contemporary and interdisciplinarydevelopments that are taking place in various specialized fields of Law. The FDP focuses to strengthen our understanding on how law connects with different disciplines. The FDP will be an interactive and inclusiveprogramme and will shed light on existing and upcoming cross-curriculum areas. This Faculty Development Programme is being organized with a two-fold objective: to align law with other fields so as to enhance the areaand scope of knowledge and widen the areas of interdisciplinary research.

SUB-THEMES

  1. Law and Psychology
  2. Feminist Jurisprudence
  3. Law and Economics
  4. Law and Digital Technologies:
  5. Piracy and Cyber Spaces
  6. Law, Environment and Development
  7. Aligning Corporate Laws with Sustainable Development Goals
  8. Media and Human Rights
  9. Hate Speech & The Constitutional Paradigm.
  10. Women and Criminal Law
  11. Rule of Law and Good governance
  12. Impact of National Education Policy on Legal Education
  13. Law and Literature
  14. Sports Law

ELIGIBILITY

The FDP has been specifically designed for earlycareer professionals, academicians, research scholars, doctoral candidates and practitioners who may be teaching or conducting research in multi-disciplinary areas of Law.

REGISTRATION FEE

INR 500/-

LINK

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-Report by Ishika Sehgal

A trial court found Kiran Kumar guilty in May 2022 after finding that he had subjected Vismaya to harassment and abuse connected to the dowry during the duration of their marriage. On Wednesday, the Kerala High Court issued a notice to the State government, the respondents in the appeal filed by Kiran Kumar challenging his conviction.

Last year, a 22-year-old Ayurveda medical student named Vismaya was found dead in her marital house under unexplained circumstances, apparently by suicide, after she had complained of dowry harassment. Her death shocked the entire state. Her spouse was therefore detained a day after the incident was made public because the death occurred less than a year after their wedding. Only a few days before she passed away, Vismaya shared images of bruises and wounds to her family members via WhatsApp, claiming that her husband was harassing her for dowry. After she was discovered dead, her family published screenshots of the WhatsApp conversation and voice messages she had sent. She had allegedly been physically abused by Kumar and his family since they weren’t happy with the “gifts” that had been presented to them for their wedding. Although the initial reports suggested suicide, it was eventually looked into as a possible homicide.

A trial court found Kiran Kumar guilty on all charges in May 2022, stating in its 441-page decision that he had harassed and abused Vismaya throughout the duration of their marriage in relation to the dowry. Sujith KN, an Additional District and Sessions Judge in Kollam, applied the following charges 304B, 306, and 498A of the Indian Penal Code,1860. And sections 2 and 3 of the Dowry Prohibition Act,1961.

It was submitted that there is no proof that the appellant in any way demanded or accepted dowry. He claims that he received the car as a gift, not as a dowry. The conversations used by the prosecution to show that he claimed dowry are just “references to his ideas” of the presents. The appellant consequently claimed that the prosecution had not presented any proof of the illegal demand. He claimed that disputes of a different kind, regardless of how hasty or accidental they may be, are not covered by Section 498A. In order to establish a presumption under Section 113 of the Indian Evidence Act, the prosecution was required to demonstrate that the deceased had been exposed to cruelty or harassment for dowry not long before the incident which they have failed to do.  Inadmissible utterances were accepted as dying declarations, he continued, and the contents of recorded phone calls and chats were incorrectly considered acceptable and proof of facts. The appellant has claimed that, in addition to a biased inquiry, he was also the target of brutal vilification and a media trial that the investigation agency used against him in various ways. Additionally, it has been claimed that the punishment he received was harsh and that he was never given the benefit of the doubt or even the presumption of innocence.

Justice Kauser Edappagath admitted the appeal and issued notice via the public prosecutor. The subject will be discussed a month from now.

About the Firm

The company was initially a tax practise when it was established in 1985 by Mr. V. Lakshmikumaran and Mr. V. Sridharan, but it has since gradually diversified into other fields. The company now provides litigation, counselling, and advising services in Tax International Trade as a full service legal firm. With the assistance of its 700+ professionals, it supports corporate, commercial dispute resolution, intellectual property rights, and food safety law.

About the Responsibilities  

In order to fill a position on the Lakshmikumaran & Sridharan Supreme Court litigation team, the company is searching for an associate with POE 1-2 years in tax.

Location

The position is full-time based in Delhi

How to Apply?

Interested candidates may apply from here: – mounica.kasturi@lakshmisri.com

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About the Organization

The Ramesh Tripathi & Associates Practice is a full-service law firm with a heavy emphasis on advising clients (individuals or corporations) about their legal rights and obligations and to stand up for clients in court disputes, commercial deals, and other problems. Our wealth of expertise and practical knowledge enable us to offer our clients a full range of legal services. Ramesh Tripathi & Associates Firm was established with the utmost integrity, a people-first philosophy, and a commitment to giving back to society wherever practical. In order to continue offering dependable and extremely effective services, we continue to adhere to the “customer first” approach.

About the Responsibilities  

The Ramesh Tripathi & Associates law firm is seeking smart, sincere, and motivated final-year interns who are interested in learning more about a variety of legal topics and getting lots of experience. Internship opening for final-year students to work for our firm in Vashi, Navi Mumbai.

As an intern you are required to:-

  • The main work needs would be research abilities, fundamental drafting, and in-person court appearances. Various criminal, consumer, labour, corporate, real estate, insolvency, and intellectual property laws would be covered in the work.

Eligibility

  • Final Year law students would be preferred.

How to Apply?

Interested candidates may apply from here: – hrfairjustice@gmail.com

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About the Organization

Eminent lawyers from many professions founded Economic Laws Practice (ELP), a top-tier, full-service Indian legal practise, in 2001. ELP has a unique team of professionals, including lawyers, chartered accountants, cost accountants, economists, and company secretaries, which enables them to provide clients with services that seamlessly combine their various fields of competence. When compared to other law firms in India, ELP has the distinct benefit of providing substantial skill sets throughout the whole range of transactional, advising, litigation, regulatory, and tax matters. Their areas of expertise include  Banking & Finance; Competition Law & Policy; Corporate & Commercial; Data Protection; Defence & Aerospace; Hospitality; International Trade & Customs Policy; Litigation, Arbitration & Dispute Resolution; Policy & Regulation; Private Equity & Venture Capital; Projects, Infrastructure & Energy; Real Estate; Securities Law and Capital Markets; Tax; Technology, Media & Telecommunications; and Insolvency and Bankruptcy Code; Corporate Governance amongst others.

About the Responsibilities  

For our Delhi-based Competition Law & Policy team, we are currently looking for a lawyer with 1 to 4 years of professional experience.

As an associate you are required to:-

  • Experience handling the full spectrum of competition law issues (cartels, abuse of dominance, mergers, and other competition law advisory)
  • Strong communication and drafting skills in relation to matters concerning competition law
  • Strong research skills
  • Must be an enthusiast for competition law
  • Must be able to work well with a close-knit team
  • Must be self-driven and should take on responsibility for publications and other team / firm initiatives
  • Association with projects like competition law journals, blogs, podcasts, etc. will be given the appropriate weight.

Location

Delhi

Eligibility

  • LLB/LLM
  • 1 to 4 years of work experience

How to Apply?

Interested candidates may apply from here: – careers@elp-in.com

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Coordinating a fair trial for those who are inculpated of criminal offences, is the backbone of democracy. A ‘fair trial’ is one of the most important humanitarian aspects of criminal justice and, in a way, an important component reflected in the rule of law. Acknowledgement of the fairest possibility to the accused in order to prove their integrity is the key component of every fair trial. Escorting a fair trial is fruitful both to the accused as well as to the civilisation. A conviction arising from an unfair trial is conflicting with our theory of justice.

INTRODUCTION

A fair trial clearly would mean a trial before an unbiased judge, an honest prosecutor and an environment of judicial tranquillity. A fair trial means a trial in which there’s no discrimination, it is not influenced or twisted for, or against the inculpated and the witnesses or the source which is being tried. If the witnesses get terrorized or are imposed to give forged evidence that also would not score in a fair trial. The failure to gather necessary witnesses is certainly denying a fair trial. The right to a fair trial in a criminal prosecution is enshrined in Article 21. Additionally, Section 142 of the Evidence Act does not give power to the prosecution to put leading questions on the material part of the evidence that a witness intends to give against the accused. To do so infringes the right of the accused to have a fair trial which is enshrined in Article 21, this is not curable in irregularity. The right to have a fair trial, rigorously in terms of the Juvenile Justice Act which would involve procedural protection, is a fundamental right of the juvenile too.

CONCEPT OF A FAIR TRIAL

The right to a fair trial is not just a right furnished in our country but it is also promised by numerous other statutes worldwide. Article 6 of the European Convention on Human Rights concerns the Right to a fair trial. The Article states that everyone is authorized to have a fair and general hearing within a rational time. The trial must be directed by the liberated and unprejudiced court of law. The African Charter of Human Rights shields the nobility of humans and prevents unfair treatment under Article 5. Article 6 of the same charter also assures separate liberty and safety to a person. The right to a fair trial is promised under Article 7 which embraces several rights like the Right to appeal to adequate jurisdiction, to defence, to be tried and to be assumed decent until proven guilty. Article 14 of the International Convention on Civil and Political Rights (ICCPR) furnishes the right to a fair trial and Article 16 gives a right to acknowledgement before the law. Article 10 of the Universal Declaration of Human Rights (UDHR), promises the right to a fair trial. The precautions related to a fair trial in the International Convention on Civil and Political Rights (ICCPR) are further intended and elaborated than the provisions in UDHR.

Principles of Fair Trial –

  1. Presumption of integrity.
  2. Unbiased, unprejudiced, equitable and competent judge.
  3. Speedy and efficient trial.
  4. The trial should be in an open court.
  5. Proficiency of allegation on adequate occasions.
  6. The trial is to be conducted in the presence of inculpated.
  7. Evidence to be taken in presence of inculpated.
  8. Cross-examination of prosecution witnesses.
  9. Prohibition of vulnerability.
  10. Legal help to be provided.

In Hussainara Khatoon v. Home Secretary, State of Bihar1, the Supreme Court has laid great emphasis on speedy trial of criminal offences, and has emphasised: “It is implicit in the broad sweep and content of article 21.” A fair trial suggests a speedy trial. No strategy can be ‘judicious, fair or just’ unless that procedure establishes a speedy trial for the determination of the sin of such a person.

In Pratap Singh v. the State of Jharkhand2, the Supreme Court held that the right to have a fair trial strictly in terms of the Juvenile Justice Act which would include procedural safeguards is a fundamental right of the juvenile.

The advent of Maneka Gandhi v. Union of India3 strengthened the concept more. This is a landmark case of the post-emergency. It exhibits liberal propensities that have affected the Supreme Court in the matter of elucidating fundamental rights, particularly, Article 21. A great evolution has come about in the judicial perspective towards the guardianship of personal liberty after the agonizing experiences of the emergency from 1975 to 1977 when personal liberty had outstretched its nadir, as understandable by the Supreme Court. It performed as a catalytic agent for the evolution of the judicial opinion on Article 21 and has been enduring varied pay-off expansion of Constitutional Law in India.

Article 21 guarantees every person a right to life and personal liberty and uses four decisive expressions, viz., ‘life’, ‘personal liberty, ‘procedure’ and ‘law’.

  1. Life: Bhagwati J., has perceived in Francis Coralie v. Delhi4, that the right to life comprises the right to live with human dignity and all that goes down with it, namely, the sustained demands of life such as sufficient nutrition, clothing and shelter above their head, reading, writing and expressing oneself in different forms, mobility and mixing and commingling with the contemporary environment.
  2. Personal Liberty: M. C. Mehta v. Union of India5, the Supreme Court commented that the term personal liberty is not cast-off in a myopic sense but has been used in Article 21 as a concise term to incorporate within it all those diversity of rights of a person which go to make up the personal liberty of a man. The liberty of a person has to be stabilized with his responsibilities and obligations towards his comrade citizens.
  3. Law: Article 21 also takes in several species of law other than the laws enacted by the legislature. S. M. Sharma v. Shri Krishna Sinha6 said that the rules made by a House of the state legislature under Article 208 have been regulated as laying down procedures established by law for purposes of Article 21. Article 21 applies to the area of legislative privileges and, thus, a person cannot be imprisoned for breach of privilege of a legislature accepted following the procedure established by law. Proceedings held before the committee of privileges of a House of the legislature under the rules framed by it in pursuance of article 208 or article 118 are by procedures established by law.
  4. Procedure: It is now established after Maneka Gandhi that procedure for reasons of Article 21 has to be reasonable, fair and just. The expression procedure acclaimed by law expands both to substantive as well as procedural law. A course of action not fulfilling the features is no course of action at all in the eyes of Article 21. In Olga Tellis v. Bombay Municipal Corporation7, the Supreme Court has again highlighted that the procedure directed by law for the seizure of the right vested by Article 21 must be fair, prejudiced and reasonable. The procedure directed by law for seizing a person of his right to life must abide by the norms of justice and fair play. The procedure which is unjust and biased in situations of a case, allures the voice of unreasonableness, thereby deteriorating the law which highlights that procedure and consequently, the measures taken under it.
  5. The onus of proof: The presumption of innocence is a human right. Article 21 given its costly meaning not only protects life and liberty but also envisages a fair process. Similarly, under Article 21, the burden is never on the petitioner to prove that the procedure prescribed by law which deprives him of his life or personal liberty, is unjust, unreasonable or unfair. Bachan Singh is an authority to propose that in cases arising under Article 21 of the Constitution, if it appears that any person is being deprived of his life or his liberty, then the burden of proof establishes the State Constitutional validity of the applicable law.

CONCLUSION

Article 21 visualizes a fair trial, a fair procedure and a fair investigation. Such a right not only entitles the appellant to be informed of their fundamental right and statutory rights, but it is also mandatory on the part of the Special Public Prosecutor to record the necessary material before the judge to show the appeal. Fair investigation and fair trial are closely connected to the preservation of the fundamental rights of the accused under Article 21 of the constitution. Reasonableness would be determined by the facts and conditions of a case and the appraisal by the courts.


CITATIONS

1 AIR 1979 SC 1360 : (1980) 1 SCC 81.

2 AIR (2005) 3 SCC 551 : AIR 2005 SC 2731.

3 AIR 1975 SC 775 : (1975) 3 SCC 836.

4 AIR 1981 SC 746, 753 : (198) 1 SCC 608.

5 (2003) 5 SCC 376 : AIR 2003 SC 3496.

6 AIR 1959 SC 395, 410-11.

7 AIR 198 SC 180, AT 196-197 : (1985) 3 SCC 545.

This article is written by Ashmita Dhumas, who has completed her BA LLB from Agra College and is currently doing a diploma in Corporate Law from Enhelion.