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A fact is said to be βprovedβ when:Anonymous voting
- A) It is stated by the accused
- B) Court believes it to exist
- C) Police says it is true
- D) The witness agrees
β€ 1
π° When Foreign Judgment Not Conclusive β Section 13, CPC π°
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1οΈβ£ Statutory Provision:
Section 13 of the Code of Civil Procedure, 1908 defines when a foreign judgment shall not be considered conclusive between the parties.
βA foreign judgment shall be conclusive as to any matter thereby directly adjudicated upon between the same parties, exceptββ (followed by six exceptions).
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2οΈβ£ Meaning:
A foreign judgment means a decision given by a court situated outside India, in a country not governed by Indian laws.
Generally, foreign judgments are conclusive and binding between the parties regarding matters decided.
However, Section 13 lists exceptions where such judgments are not conclusive.
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3οΈβ£ Object / Purpose:
To ensure that only fair, competent and lawful judgments of foreign courts are recognized in India.
Prevents enforcement of judgments obtained unjustly or without due process.
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4οΈβ£ Case Laws:
π Satya v. Teja Singh (AIR 1975 SC 105):
Foreign divorce decree not recognized as husband misled the foreign court; held obtained by fraud and without jurisdiction.
π R. Viswanathan v. Rukn-ul-Mulk Syed Abdul Wajid (AIR 1963 SC 1):
Foreign judgment is conclusive only if pronounced by a competent court observing principles of natural justice.
π International Woollen Mills v. Standard Wool (U.K.) Ltd. (2001) 5 SCC 265:
Ex parte judgment without trial on merits not conclusive under Section 13(b).
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5οΈβ£ Relation with Section 14 CPC:
Section 14 provides that courts shall presume the competence and regularity of a foreign judgment unless the contrary is proved.
But if any Section 13 exception applies, the presumption under Section 14 is rebutted.
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6οΈβ£ Example:
A foreign court passes a judgment against B without giving him an opportunity to present his defense.
β‘οΈ Such a judgment is opposed to natural justice (Section 13(d)), hence not conclusive in India.
β€ 1
Under Section 2, a βdocumentβ can be in:Anonymous voting
- A) Written form only
- B) Electronic form only
- C) Any form, written or electronic
- D) Oral form only
π° Res Judicata β Section 11, CPC π°
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1οΈβ£ Statutory Provision:
Section 11 of the Code of Civil Procedure, 1908 lays down the rule of Res Judicata.
βNo Court shall try any suit or issue in which the matter directly and substantially in issue has been directly and substantially in issue in a former suit between the same parties... and has been heard and finally decided by such Court.β
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2οΈβ£ Meaning:
The doctrine of Res Judicata means that a matter once finally decided cannot be reopened or re-litigated between the same parties.
The term βRes Judicataβ is Latin for βa thing already adjudicated.β
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3οΈβ£ Object / Purpose:
To prevent:
Multiplicity of litigation
Conflicting judgments
Harassment of parties
Waste of judicial time
Promotes finality in judicial decisions.
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4οΈβ£ Important Case Laws:
π Satyadhyan Ghosal v. Deorajin Debi (AIR 1960 SC 941):
Res Judicata applies at different stages of the same proceedings.
π Daryao v. State of U.P. (AIR 1961 SC 1457):
The rule of Res Judicata applies even to writ petitions under Article 32 and 226 of the Constitution.
π Sheodan Singh v. Daryao Kunwar (AIR 1966 SC 1332):
If the decision in the earlier suit is final, the second suit on the same matter is barred.
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5οΈβ£ Exceptions to Res Judicata:
Res Judicata does not apply when β
The earlier decision was obtained by fraud or collusion.
The court lacked jurisdiction in the earlier case.
Change in law or new facts have arisen.
Writ of Habeas Corpus (personal liberty) β not barred by Res Judicata.
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6οΈβ£ Example:
A sues B for ownership of property and the court decides in favor of A.
B cannot again file a suit against A for the same property on the same grounds.
β‘οΈ The second suit is barred by Res Judicata under Section 11 CPC.
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7οΈβ£ Doctrine of Constructive Res Judicata (Explanation IV):
If a party could have raised a matter in the earlier proceeding but failed to do so, it is deemed to have been decided.
Example: A sues B for rent of one year but omits rent of the next year that was due; he cannot later sue separately for it.
β€ 2
"Not proved" means:Anonymous voting
- A) Clearly disproved
- B) Either not proved or not disproved
- C) Assumed true
- D) Accepted without evidence
π° Stay of Suit β Section 10, CPC π°
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1οΈβ£ Statutory Provision:
Section 10 of the Code of Civil Procedure, 1908 deals with βStay of Suit.β
βNo Court shall proceed with the trial of any suit in which the matter in issue is also directly and substantially in issue in a previously instituted suit between the same partiesβ¦ pending in the same or any other Court having jurisdiction.β
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2οΈβ£ Meaning:
When two suits involving the same subject matter and same parties are filed, the court may stay (pause) the later suit to avoid duplication and conflicting decisions.
This is known as the doctrine of res sub judice.
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3οΈβ£ Purpose / Object:
To prevent:
Multiplicity of suits
Conflicting judgments
Waste of judicial time
Harassment of parties by parallel proceedings
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4οΈβ£ Effect of Stay:
The court cannot proceed with the trial of the subsequent suit, but other proceedings (like interim orders) may continue.
It is a mandatory provision when conditions of Section 10 are fulfilled.
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5οΈβ£ Nature:
It does not bar the institution of the later suit;
It only stays the trial (proceedings) of the later suit until the earlier one is decided.
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6οΈβ£ Important Case Laws:
π Indian Bank v. Maharashtra State Cooperative Marketing Federation (1998) 5 SCC 69:
Section 10 applies only when the matter in issue is directly and substantially the same in both suits.
π National Institute of Mental Health v. C. Parameshwara (2005) 2 SCC 256:
The object of Section 10 is to prevent courts of concurrent jurisdiction from simultaneously trying two parallel suits.
π Aspen Developers Pvt. Ltd. v. Orbit Corporation Ltd. (2008 Bom):
Stay of the suit is procedural and aims at avoiding conflicting decisions.
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7οΈβ£ Exception:
Section 10 applies only to civil suits, not to:
Writ petitions
Proceedings under special laws
Summary suits under Order 37 CPC
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8οΈβ£ Example:
A files a suit in Delhi for ownership of property.
B later files a suit in Mumbai on the same property and same cause of action.
β‘οΈ The Mumbai court shall stay the later suit under Section 10 CPC.
"Disproved" means:Anonymous voting
- A) The court believes it does not exist
- B) The court is not sure
- C) The court assumes it to be true
- D) Hearsay evidence
π° Courts to Try All Civil Suits Unless Barred β Section 9, CPC π°
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1οΈβ£ Statutory Provision:
Section 9 of the Code of Civil Procedure, 1908 provides:
βThe Courts shall (subject to the provisions herein contained) have jurisdiction to try all suits of a civil nature excepting suits of which their cognizance is either expressly or impliedly barred.β
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2οΈβ£ Meaning:
Civil courts are courts of general jurisdiction.
They can try all suits of a civil nature unless:
The jurisdiction is expressly barred by a statute, or
Impliedly barred by necessary implication of law.
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3οΈβ£ Civil Nature:
A dispute affecting private rights such as property, office, reputation or contractual rights is of civil nature.
Even if the case involves a religious element, if it concerns civil rights (like right to property or office), it remains of civil nature.
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4οΈβ£ Express Bar:
When a specific statute clearly excludes the jurisdiction of civil courts.
Example: Section 293 of the Income Tax Act, 1961 bars civil court jurisdiction regarding tax assessments.
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5οΈβ£ Implied Bar:
When the law provides an alternative remedy or a special tribunal, it is implied that civil court jurisdiction is excluded.
Example: Industrial Disputes Act creates Labour Courts and Industrial Tribunals for workmen disputes.
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6οΈβ£ Case Laws:
π Dhulabhai v. State of M.P. (AIR 1969 SC 78):
Laid down principles to determine when civil court jurisdiction is excluded.
Civil court has jurisdiction unless the statute gives finality to orders of special tribunals and provides adequate remedies.
π Secretary of State v. Mask & Co. (AIR 1940 PC 105):
Civil courtβs jurisdiction is presumed unless clearly or necessarily excluded.
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7οΈβ£ Key Principle:
βCivil courts have inherent jurisdiction to decide all civil matters unless excluded by law, either expressly or by necessary implication.β
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8οΈβ£ Example:
A dispute over ownership of property β Civil Court has jurisdiction.
Dispute over income tax assessment β Civil Court has no jurisdiction (barred by statute).
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9οΈβ£ Objective:
To ensure access to justice for enforcement of civil rights and to provide a general remedy where no special law applies.
β€ 1
The definition of βprovedβ includes:Anonymous voting
- A) Possibility of truth
- B) Not relevant
- C) Believed to exist by the court
- D) Rejected by the court
β€ 1
π° Common Cause v. Union of India (Passive Euthanasia, 2018) π°
Citation: (2018) 5 SCC 1
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π Brief Facts
Petition sought recognition of right to die with dignity for terminally ill patients.
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π Issues
Whether passive euthanasia violates Article 21 (Right to Life & Dignity).
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π Judgment
Supreme Court held:
βοΈ Right to die with dignity is part of Article 21.
βοΈ Passive euthanasia allowed under strict safeguards and procedure.
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π Significance
Landmark for end-of-life care and personal autonomy.
Emphasised dignity as core of Right to Life.
β€ 1
βEvidenceβ includes:Anonymous voting
- A) Documentary evidence only
- B) Oral evidence only
- C) Both oral and documentary evidence
- D) Hearsay
β€ 1
π° India Today Group v. Union of India (PIL β Right to Information) π°
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π Brief Facts
Petition sought access to government-held information under PIL framework.
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π Issues
Whether citizens have right to access information affecting governance.
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π Judgment
Supreme Court held that:
βοΈ Right to information is part of Right to Freedom of Speech and Article 21.
βοΈ Government transparency is essential in a democracy.
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π Significance
Basis for RTI Act, 2005.
Strengthened accountability and transparency in governance.
β€ 1
Which one is not considered a βdocumentβ under Section 2(d)?Anonymous voting
- A) Video file
- B) SMS
- C) Oral statement
- D) Printed contract
β€ 1
π° MC Mehta v. Union of India (Oleum Gas Leak Case, 1987) π°
Citation: AIR 1987 SC 1086
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π Brief Facts
Gas leak from Oleum plant endangered public health.
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π Issues
Whether plant owners are liable for hazardous industrial activity.
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π Judgment
βοΈ Supreme Court introduced absolute liability:
βοΈ Hazardous industries are strictly liable for accidents.
βοΈ No exceptions for acts of God, employee negligence or third parties.
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π Significance
Landmark in environmental and industrial safety law.
Strengthened public health and safety protections.
β€ 2
βRelevant factβ is defined under:Anonymous voting
- A) Section 2(b)
- B) Section 2(d)
- C) Section 2(k)
- D) Section 3
β€ 1
π° Central Bureau of Investigation v. CBI Officers Association (2019) β Anti-Corruption π°
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π Brief Facts
Case on independence and accountability of investigative agencies, especially CBI.
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π Issues
Whether government interference violates rule of law and impartiality.
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π Judgment
Supreme Court emphasised:
βοΈ Autonomy and impartiality of investigative agencies are essential for constitutional governance.
βοΈ Appointments, transfers and removal must follow transparent process.
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π Significance
Strengthened anti-corruption institutional integrity.
Ensured CBI independence from executive interference.
