Recent Posts

Cryptocurrency trade: Supreme Court lifts RBI ban, says no damage evident

New Delhi, March 4: The Supreme Court on Wednesday set aside an RBI circular that imposed a blanket ban on banks and financial institutions from providing services to any individual or business dealing in digital currencies. 

As the SC had earlier refused to stay the circular issued in April 2018, the banks and bourses dealing with cryptocurrencies, including bitcoins, had closed down operations since July 6, 2018. 

The RBI circular had declared that cryptocurrency related businesses like virtual currencies, crypto assets, etc, are illegal and had also mandated banks, e-wallets, and payment gateway providers to withdraw support for such exchanges and other businesses dealing with virtual currencies in India.

Cryptocurrencies are digital or virtual currencies in which encryption techniques are used to regulate the generation of their units and verify the transfer of funds, operating independently of a central bank. 

According to an industry executive, Indians traded roughly 2,500 bitcoins per day before the ban. With the lifting of the curbs, the number may substantially go up, he added.

A three-judge bench comprising justices RF Nariman Aniruddha Bose and V Ramasubramanian quashed the RBI circular on the ground of “proportionality”. 

“When the consistent stand of RBI is that they have not banned VCs and when the government is unable to take a call despite several committees coming up with several proposals including two draft bills, both of which advocated exactly opposite positions, it is not possible for us to hold that the impugned measure is proportionate,” the bench said.

The apex court said that there is no doubt that RBI has wide powers and can be exercised both as “preventive” as well as “curative” measures. “But the availability of power is different from the manner and extent to which it can be exercised. While we have recognized.. the power of RBI to take a pre-emptive action, we are testing…the proportionality of such measure for the determination of which RBI needs to show at least some semblance of any damage suffered by its regulated entities. But there is none,” Justice Ramasubramanian, writing the judgment for the bench, said in its 180-page verdict.

Till date,the RBI has not come out with a stand that any of the entities regulated by it – the nationalized banks/scheduled commercial banks/cooperative banks/NBFCs – has suffered any loss or adverse effect directly or indirectly, on account of the interface that the VC exchanges had with any of them, it said.

The SC noted that the inter-ministerial committee had in February 2019 recommended total ban on private crypto currencies through a legislation “Banning of Cryptocurrency and Regulation of Official Digital Currency Act, 2019” and also asked the government to consider launching its own digital money.

“In case the enactment (2019) had come through, there would have been an official digital currency, for the creation and circulation of which, RBI/central government would have had a monopoly. But that situation had not arisen… What is worse is that this has been done despite RBI not finding anything wrong about the way in which these exchanges function and despite the fact that VCs are not banned,” the SC stated.

https://www.financialexpress.com/market/cryptocurrency-trade-supreme-court-lifts-rbi-ban-says-no-damage-evident/1889423/

Working woman giving birth to child after twins in first delivery not entitled to maternity benefits: Madras HC

Chennai, March 3: The Madras High Court has ruled that if a working woman gives birth to a child in the second delivery after twins were born to her after her first pregnancy, she is not entitled to maternity benefits as it should be treated as third child.

“As per existing rules, a woman can avail such benefits only for her first two deliveries. Even otherwise it is debatable as to whether the delivery is not a second delivery but a third one, inasmuch as ordinarily when twins are born they are delivered one after another, and their age and their inter-se elderly status is also determined by virtue of the gap of time between their arrivals, which amounts to two deliveries and not one simultaneous act,” the court said.

The first bench, comprising Chief Justice A P Sahi and Justice Subramonium Prasad stated this while allowing the appeal from Ministry of Home Affairs.

It set aside the order June 18, 2019 order of a single Judge, who extended 180 days of maternity leave and other benefits to a woman member of the Central Industrial Security Force (CISF) under the rules governing the Tamil Nadu government servants.

The issue pertains to an appeal moved by the ministry, which contended that the leave claim is by a member of CISF to whom the maternity rules of Tamil Nadu would not apply. She would be covered by the maternity benefits as provided under the Central Civil Services (Leave) Rules, the ministry said.

When the appeal came up for hearing, the bench said it found that a second delivery, which, in the present case, resulted in a third child, cannot be interpreted so as to add to the mathematical precision that is defined in the rules.

Read more:

https://www.indiatoday.in/india/story/working-woman-giving-birth-to-child-after-twins-in-1st-delivery-not-entitled-to-maternity-benefits-madras-hc-1651776-2020-03-03

U.N. rights body to move Supreme Court on Citizenship Amendment Act

New Delhi, Mar 3: In an unprecedented and rare move, the Geneva-based Office of the High Commissioner for Human Rights (OHCHR) has announced that it plans to file an application in the Indian Supreme Court, asking to be impleaded in the petitions challenging the Citizenship (Amendment) Act.

The Ministry of External Affairs (MEA) said the United Nations body had no right to file a petition that will ask the court to appoint the Commissioner for Human Rights as an assistant or ‘amicus curiae’ in the case.

The OHCHR plan has been criticised by diplomatic and legal experts here, including one of the 22 petitioners in the case, as an “overreach” by it.

“The High Commissioner [Michelle Bachelete] intends to submit an ‘amicus curiae’ brief shortly on the Citizenship [Amendment] Act [CAA] in the Indian Supreme Court, in accordance with the Court’s established procedures, and she has informed the Indian Permanent Mission in Geneva of her intention,” Rupert Colville, OHCHR spokesperson based in Geneva, said. 

“The amicus curiae will focus on providing an overview of relevant and applicable international human rights standards and norms to support the Court’s deliberations in the context of its review of the CAA,” the spokesperson said.

U.N. sources said Ms. Bachelet had informed India about the plans to file the intervention in the Supreme Court when she met with MEA Secretary (West) Vikas Swarup while he was in Geneva to represent India at the Human Rights Council plenary session last week. 

The MEA didn’t confirm the claim but said the Indian Mission in Geneva had been formally informed on March 2 of the OHCHR’s plans.

Read more:

https://www.thehindu.com/news/national/un-rights-body-to-move-supreme-court-on-citizenship-amendment-act/article30970693.ece

‘Woman always knows man’s intention,’ Bombay HC tells convict who molested child actor in flight

Mumbai, March 3: The Bombay High Court on Tuesday suspended the sentence of a businessman convicted of molesting in 2017 a minor woman who was then a Bollywood actor, while stating that a woman always knows a man’s intention when he touches her or looks at her.

Justice Prithviraj Chavan made the observation while hearing an appeal filed by the 41-year-old businessman, Vikas Sachdeva, in the case.

In January, a sessions court had convicted Sachdeva under the Protection of Children from Sexual Offences (POCSO) Act for molesting the former actor, who is now an adult, and sentenced him to three years in prison.

On February 20, Sachdeva filed a plea in the High Court, claiming he was not guilty. Advocate Aniket Nikam, who appeared for Sachdeva, told the court on Tuesday that his client had been wrongly convicted. In his arguments, Nikam claimed that even if Sachdeva’s leg touched the complainant’s, his intention was not to harass her. “It must have been a mistake,” he added.

The judge, however, asked why Sachdeva decided to keep his leg on the arm rest of the seat in front of him in the first place. “You [Sachdeva] were travelling in business class where you have a lot of space,” he said. “ Then why keep your leg on someone else’s arm rest?”

“A woman may know less but she understands more,” the judge said. “It is a natural gift. [Whether it is] a touch or a look…a man will not understand but a woman knows the intention behind these. It is only the victim who can talk about the accused’s real intention. He will never admit to touching her intentionally.”

Nikam argued that at the time of the incident, the complainant had not complained to the crew members and that she even walked out of the flight “smiling”. The court objected to this and said there is no fixed code of conduct on how a woman should react to such incidents. “This is not mathematics,” the judge said. “There is no straitjacket formula on how a woman would behave or react.”

Chavan also highlighted the struggle of scores of women who face similar incidents of harassment while travelling in local trains and buses on a daily basis.

The court then suspended Sachdeva’s sentence till the appeal is heard and decided. It further asked the businessman to submit a fresh bail bond on the surety of Rs 25,000 and directed him not to leave Mumbai without the court’s permission. 

“There is no scope of the appeal being heard and decided in the near future, and since the sentence imposed on the applicant [Sachdeva] is short, the sentence stands suspended,” the court observed.

Read more:

https://scroll.in/latest/955028/woman-always-knows-mans-intention-bombay-hc-tells-convict-who-molested-child-actor-in-flight

Delhi High Court asks builders to deposit 50% of profiteered amount

New Delhi, March 3: The Delhi High Court has asked two real estate companies to deposit 50 per cent of the alleged profiteered amount in separate funds, and stayed the order of the National Anti-profiteering Authority (NAA) till the final ruling.

“The petitioner is directed to deposit 50 per cent of the principal profiteered amount. The said amount shall be deposited in two equal monthly instalments,” said the court in one of the orders. The court also ordered that the deposit be kept in interest bearing fixed deposit receipts.

The cases involve two builders whose projects are based in Noida and Gurugram.

The NAA has imposed a penalty of Rs 5 crore each on the two builders for allegedly not passing the benefits of the Goods and Services Tax (GST) regime to the home buyers.

The projects started in pre-GST period but continued even after July 2017 when the GST was rolled out.

The NAA calculated the profiteered amount from its calculation of input tax credit that is available in the GST system and companies’ gross turnover.

Read more:

https://www.business-standard.com/article/economy-policy/delhi-high-court-asks-builders-to-deposit-50-of-profiteered-amount-120030301713_1.html

Nirbhaya case: Day before scheduled hanging, SC rejects curative plea of convict Pawan Gupta

New Delhi, March 2: A five-judge bench of the Supreme Court has rejected the curative petition filed by Delhi gang rape convict Pawan Kumar Gupta.

The Supreme Court was on Monday hearing ‘in chamber’ the curative plea of Pawan Kumar Gupta, one of the four death row convicts in the 2012 Nirbhaya gang rape and murder case – a day before scheduled hanging.

A five-judge bench headed by Justice N V Ramana said no case is made out for re-examining the conviction and the punishment of the convict.

Pawan, 25, was the last death row convict in the case to have moved the SC with his curative plea, the final legal remedy available to a person. With his curative petition dismissed, Pawan can now file a mercy plea before President Ram Nath Kovind. The mercy petitions of the three other convicts have already been dismissed.

Pawan against whom the death warrant was issued for execution on March 3 along with the three others, had claimed juvenility to seek commutation of sentence to life imprisonment. 

Advocate A P Singh filed an application in the SC registry on Sunday seeking an oral hearing on Pawan’s curative plea in the open court.

In the curative plea before the SC, Pawan pleaded that his age on the day of the offence was 16 years and two months as per records of the school last attended by him and “the age has not been determined in accordance with the procedures laid down under the Juvenile Justice Act”.

This information was suppressed by the State throughout the proceedings, Pawan had claimed. He was the lone convict who had not exhausted his legal remedies of filing a curative petition and subsequent mercy plea with the President.

Read more:

https://www.indiatoday.in/india/story/nirbhaya-case-hanging-supreme-court-reject-curative-plea-convict-pawan-gupta-1651507-2020-03-02

Delhi court defers hanging of 4 Nirbhaya case convicts till further orders

New Delhi, March 2: A Delhi court Monday deferred till further orders the hanging of the four death row convicts in the 2012 Nirbhaya gang rape and murder case pending disposal of a convict’s mercy plea, saying it was “an important constitutional legal principle”.

All the convicts in the case were to be hanged together on Tuesday at 6 AM. The execution of their death warrants has now been deferred thrice due to delays in exhausting legal remedies.

Additional Sessions Judge Dharmender Rana said the death sentence cannot be executed pending disposal of the mercy petition of convict Pawan Gupta.

“Despite stiff resistance from the victim’s side, I am of the opinion that any condemned convict must not meet his Creator with a grievance in his bosom that the courts of the country have not acted fairly in granting him an opportunity to exhaust his legal remedies,” the judge said.

“As a cumulative effect of the discussion, I am of the opinion that the death sentence cannot be executed pending the disposal of the mercy petition of the convict. It is hereby directed that the execution of death warrants against all the convicts, scheduled for March 3 at 6 AM, is deferred till further orders,” the judge added.

The court passed the order on Pawan’s plea seeking to stay the execution as he filed a mercy petition before the President on Monday.

Read more:

https://www.business-standard.com/article/current-affairs/delhi-court-defers-hanging-of-december-16-gangrape-convicts-120030200982_1.html

SC Bench will deliver J&K ruling on March 2

New Delhi, February 28: A five-judge Constitution Bench, led by Justice N.V. Ramana, will on March 2 pronounce its order on a plea to refer to a larger bench the petitions challenging the abrogation of the special status of Jammu and Kashmir under Article 370 of the Constitution.

The bench had heard arguments and reserved its verdict on whether there was a “direct conflict” of opinion between two judgments — one of 1959 and the other of 1970 — about the nature and extent of Article 370.

The Presidents’ notification of August 5 abrogated the special status by blunting Article 370, the source of the privileges accorded to the erstwhile State in accordance with the assurances made in the Instrument of Accession signed between the Jammu and Kashmir ruler and the Government of India.  

However, the two judgments, both by five-judge benches of the Supreme Court, had given contradictory views on Article 370. 

The 1959 one, Prem Nath Kaul versus State of Jammu and Kashmir, had indicated that Article 370 was applicable only till the Jammu and Kashmir Constitution was enacted on January 26, 1957. Thereafter, no further changes could be made to the relationship between India and Jammu and Kashmir.

But the judgment delivered in 1970, Sampath Prakash versus State of Jammu and Kashmir, ignored the 1959 verdict and concluded that Article 370 was permanent and a “perennial source of power” for the Centre to govern its relationship with Jammu and Kashmir.

Senior advocate Dinesh Dwivedi, seconded by senior advocate Rajeev Dhavan, had argued that Justice Ramana’s Bench was the third five-judge bench examining a case concerning the use of Article 370. They had urged that the petitions be referred to a larger Bench.

The Constitution Bench had asked pertinent questions, including who was the “competent authority” to bring the extinct Constituent Assembly of Jammu and Kashmir back to life.

The Constituent Assembly had ceased to exist in January 1957, with the coming of the Jammu and Kashmir Constitution. Before it disbanded, the Constituent Assembly did not take a decision in favour of abrogation of Article 370.

https://www.thehindu.com/news/national/sc-bench-will-deliver-jk-ruling-on-march-2/article30952178.ece

SC agrees to hear plea for transfer of rape case against Swami Chinmayanand to Delhi court

New Delhi, February 28: The Supreme Court on Friday agreed to hear the plea of the law student to transfer the rape case against former union minister Swami Chinmayanand from Uttar Pradesh court to Delhi court. 

Senior advocate Collin Gonsalves, representing the complainant woman, submitted before the bench that the women apprehended a threat to her life in Uttar Pradesh, hence pleads for the transfer of the trial to Delhi. 

A bench headed by Chief Justice S A Bobde agreed to hear the plea on 2 March. The bench also comprising of justices BR Gavai and Surya Kant asked Gonsalves to approach the administration for seeking police protection. Gonsalves, however, said that a gunman has been given to her by the UP Police for her security.

https://www.livemint.com/news/india/sc-agrees-to-hear-plea-for-transfer-of-rape-case-against-swami-chinmayanand-to-delhi-court-11582893732361.html

‘Good words for you also, but…’: Justice Mishra who praised PM to Cong lawyer in court

New Delhi, February 28: Dragging judges into controversy for “good words” spoken by them should be avoided, Supreme Court judge Justice Arun Mishra said in open court on Friday in a veiled reference to the controversy that erupted after he praised Prime Minister Narendra Modi at an international judicial conference on February 22.

The remarks were made by Justice Mishra during the hearing of a case relating to the sealing of a play school near Khan Market, an upmarket neighbourhood in Lutyens Delhi, when the judge and senior counsel Abhishek Manu Singhvi engaged in friendly banter.

Singhvi, who was appearing for the management of the play school, argued against the sealing when Justice Mishra asked Singhvi whether he lived near Khan Market.

Singhvi replied that he had left Lutyens Delhi long ago although he visits Khan Market at times. He also said he was not bothered about being called a “Khan Market elite”, referring to a jibe made by the Prime Minister last year.

“It has become an abuse these days. I don’t have a problem in being called a ‘Khan Market elite’. Lot of good coffee shops are there. I sometimes see judges also there”, said Singhvi.

Justice Mishra then said that judges “using good words” should be taken in its proper spirit. “I can use some good words for you also but then other people will start blaming me”, said Justice Mishra.

Justice Mishra, who on February 22 delivered the vote of thanks at the inaugural ceremony of the international judicial conference, had heaped praised on PM Modi. The Prime Minister, Justice Mishra had said, was “a versatile genius who thinks globally and acts locally.”

The remarks by justice Mishra came in for criticism from various quarters. The Supreme Court Bar Association has condemned his remarks, stating they reflected poorly on the independence of the judiciary.

https://www.hindustantimes.com/india-news/justice-arun-mishra-singhvi-in-banter-over-khan-mkt/story-lG81bVtjRxdFOvbY0rqSbI.html

Nirbhaya case convict files curative petition in Supreme Court

Friday, February 28: Pawan Gupta, one of the four death row convicts in the Nirbhaya gang rape and murder case, on Friday filed a curative plea in the Supreme Court against his death sentence. 

A five-judge bench led by Justice N.V. Ramana is scheduled to hear the petition on March 2. The date of execution of their death sentence is March 3 at 6 a.m.

Gupta’s lawyer, advocate A.P. Singh, told the media that he was a juvenile at the time of the crime and was not present at the place of crime. He was at a park attending a musical show, he claimed. The petition said the court did not follow the principles of natural justice while confirming his death sentence.

The other three convicts — Vinay Sharma, Mukesh Kumar Singh and Akshay Thakur — seemed to have exhausted their legal remedies. Gupta has also not filed a plea for clemency with the President.

Recently, the Supreme Court had dismissed a petition filed by Sharma, challenging the rejection of his mercy plea by the President in the case.

https://www.thehindu.com/news/national/bench-to-hear-pawans-plea-on-march-2/article30952957.ece