CLAT 2025 Result Judgement (OUT): Result Notification Released by Consortium of NLUs

CLAT 2025 Result Judgement (OUT): Result Notification Released by Consortium of NLUs

Edited By Sukriti Sahoo | Updated on Apr 24, 2025 02:06 PM IST | #CLAT

The Delhi High Court delivered its verdict on April 23, 2025 regarding multiple petitions challenging the CLAT UG 2025 results. As per the court's pronouncement of judgement, Chief Justice D K Upadhyaya and Justice Tushar Rao Gedela announced the decision on April 23 at 2:30 pm. The verdict for 11 petitions concerning the CLAT UG exam has been announced. The court has directed the NLU Consortium to revise the marksheet and republish and renotify the final selected candidates within 4 weeks. Meanwhile, the Consortium of NLUs has also accepted the court's judgment and released a notification on its website.
Important: CLAT 2025 result notification after Delhi HC verdict, consortium accepts verdict

CLAT 2025 Result Judgement (OUT): Result Notification Released by Consortium of NLUs
CLAT 2025 Result Judgement (OUT): Result Notification Released by Consortium of NLUs

The court identified errors in 4 questions, which will significantly change a candidate’s score in the CLAT 2025 revised result. As per the Delhi HC judgement on CLAT 2025 results, a candidate can gain up to 4 marks or lose up to 2.25 marks due to the CLAT 2025 revised result. A bench of Chief Justice D K Upadhyaya and Justice Tushar Rao Gedela accepted some objections raised by the candidates, while rejecting others. The court refused to interfere with answers to questions 14, 37, 49, 56, 78, 79, 80, 81, 88, 91, 93 and 97 of the master booklet. On April 9, the final hearing of CLAT UG took place, and a Division Bench comprising Chief Justice Devendra Kumar Upadhyaya and Justice Tushar Rao Gedela had reserved its judgement. The Consortium of National Law Universities is expected to declare the revised CLAT 2025 results in the last week of April, and the CLAT 2025 counselling dates will be announced soon.

What did the Delhi HC say on CLAT UG 2025 Judgement?

  • The Delhi HC ordered the Consortium of National Law Universities (NLUs) to revise the marksheets of the candidates and publish/renotify the final list of selected candidates within four weeks.
  • The Delhi High Court ordered the Consortium to hire better paper settlers
  • Out of the 17 objections raised, 13 questions from the master booklet have been rejected by the Delhi HC and 4 questions have been considered.

Errors in 4 questions in the CLAT Delhi HC Judgement

There are a total of 17 questions under consideration for the Delhi HC Judgement. Many objections in the CLAT UG 2025 have been rejected by the Delhi High Court. A majority of 13 objections in the CLAT UG have been rejected, and 4 questions have been accepted by the Delhi HC. The court identified errors in four questions i.e 5, 77, 115 and 116 of the master booklet in the CLAT 2025 exam. However, the court refused to interfere with answers to questions 14, 37, 49, 56, 78, 79, 80, 81, 88, 91, 93 and 97 of the master booklet. The objections that have been accepted and rejected by the court are mentioned below as per the master booklet.

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Questions under Consideration in the Delhi High Court

Question NoSubject/ Issue DecisionOutcome
Q5English Comprehension - Passage-basedAnswer changed from 'D' to 'C'Candidate friendly
Q14Objection filed late by the petitioner (Harshita)Dismissed due to delay in objectionRejected
Q37Current Affairs - BRICS SummitFinal answer 'C' upheldIn favor of the Consortium
Q49Nari Shakti Vandan Adhiniyam - Delimitation/ Census'D' None of the above upheld as correctIn favor of the Consortium
Q56Legal Reasoning - Climate Change'D' upheld over 'C'; passage supports 'D'In favor of the Consortium
Q77Legal Reasoning - Contract with MinorDeclared "Out of Syllabus" - needed prior legal knowledgeCandidate friendly
Q78Legal Reasoning - Void Agreement'C' upheld (Rs. 10 Lakhs for govt job")- other plausible but less fittingIn favor of the Consortium
Q79Legal Reasoning - ConsiderationObjection dismissed as no timely challenge madeRejected
Q80Legal Reasoning - Bill Becoming Law'D' upheld; passage stated President's assent clearlyRejected
Q81Legal Reasoning - Service Provider Penalty'D' None of the above upheld; fine + cost + ban coveredIn favor of the Consortium
Q88Data Sufficiency (Reasoning)'D' Data Inadequate accepted per Oversight CommitteeCandidate-friendly (if attempted)
Q91Homelessness - CausesChanged from 'D' to 'C' by Oversight CommitteeIn favor of the Consortium
Q93Homelessness & Mental IllnessChanged from 'D' to 'C'; Court agreed with Oversight CommitteeIn favor of the Consortium
Q97Most suitable title- Lifestyle and Mental Health'A' upheld as best fitIn favor of the Consortium
Q114General Knowledge - No further details providedPetitioner withdrew objectionDismissed
Q115Quantitative - Calculation errorAnswer key wrong; marks to be awarded to all who attemptedCandidate-friendly
Q116Quantitative - Reference error in Sets B, C, DError admitted; marks awarded to all in Sets B, C, DCandidate-friendly. Full marks awarded for Sets B/C/D.

No court interference in Set A
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Objections Accepted by the Delhi HC

Question NoDecisionOutcome
Question 5Incorrect option given in answer key; option (C) is the correct answerAll candidates who marked option (C) to get the benefit
Question 77Out of syllabus to be excluded and treated as withdrawnStudents who marked the correct answer will lose their mark, and the students who marked the wrong answer will gain 0.25 marks that they lost by negative marking
Question 115The answer in option (A), “Rs. 204 approx” as provided in the provisional answer key has been found to be incorrect, and the answer in option (D), “None of these” is the correct answer.All candidates who attempted this question will get full marks.
Question 116All the candidates who participated in CLAT UG 2025 with respect to the Sets B, C & D of question papers shall be granted the marks indicated against the said question.

Since, Set A did not have this error, the court deemed it fit not to interfere with the marks obtained by all those candidates who answered correctly.
Full marks awarded for candidates who attempted the question in Sets B, C and D.

No court interference in Set A.
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CLAT UG 2025 Hearings in Delhi HC from April 7-9, 2025

The Delhi High Court conducted hearings for CLAT UG 2025, addressing 13 cases individually. Petitioners presented their arguments, while Senior Advocate Rajashekhar Rao, representing the Consortium of NLUs, argued against judicial interference in academic matters. However, the Delhi High Court will hear the CLAT PG 2025 petitions on May 2, 2025.


1745387158344CLAT UG 2025 Hearings in Delhi HC from April 7-9, 2025



CLAT UG 2025 Case List

Case

Case No.

Shivraj Sharma Vs Consoritum of NLUs and Ors

W.P.(C) 4157 / 2025

Yajat Sen Vs Consortium of NLUs

W.P.(C) 4375 / 2025

Aditya Singh (Minor) Vs Consortium of NLUs

LPA 1250/2024 & CM APPL. 76373/2024, CM APPL. 76374/2024

Consortium of NLUs (appellant) vs Aditya Singh (Minor) through his father (respondent)

LPA 1251/2024 & CM APPL. 76410/2024, CM APPL. 76411/2024


Harshita and Ors Vs Consortium of NLUs

W.P.(C) 2363/2025

Master Timabak Eashwar through natural guardian Vasudha Thiagarajan Vs Consortium of NLUs

W.P.(C) 2365/2025

Prabhas Kumar (Minor) through natural guardian Prakhar Kumar Vs Consortium of NLUs

W.P.(C) 2366/2025

Aslesha Ajitsaria (Minor) represented by her father Vinay Ajitsaria Vs Consortium of NLUs

W.P.(C) 2367/2025

Hardik Garg Vs Consortium of NLUs

W.P.(C) 2516/2025

Harshit Garg Vs Consortium of NLUs


W.P.(C) 2517/2025

A Vaishnavi (Minor) through her father Shri T Arun Vs Consortium of NLUs


W.P.(C) 2559/2025

When Will CLAT UG 2025 Counselling Start?

The CLAT UG 2025 counselling process has been delayed due to the ongoing legal challenges in the Delhi HC regarding the CLAT 2025 results and answer key. The Consortium of NLUs will announce the CLAT 2025 counselling schedule once the related legal cases are settled. The CLAT PG hearing is scheduled for May 2, 2025. Based on these dates, the Consortium is likely to release revised results and commence CLAT 2025 counselling tentatively in late April or early May 2025.

CLAT 2025 Delhi HC Hearing: Live Updates

In this section, get the latest updates about the CLAT 2025 Delhi HC hearing.

2:45 pm: CLAT UG Judgement Delivered

The Division Bench of the Delhi HC directed the Consortium to republish and renotify within four weeks the final list of selected candidates who gave the CLAT UG exam 2025. The detailed judgement on CLAT UG results will be available on the website of the Delhi HC.

2:43 pm: What the Chief Justice said on CLAT UG Judgement

Chief Justice said that, " We have acceded to certain objections of the candidates. We have maintained that those who did not raise objection within the window period, their objections cannot be decided.

2:38 pm: CLAT 2025 Hearing Started

The Delhi HC has started the hearing of petitions on CLAT UG results. The court is expected to deliver the CLAT UG judgement soon.

1:50 pm: When will the CLAT UG Judgement start?

The Delhi HC will start the CLAT UG judgement at 2:30 PM. The judgement for CLAT UG results 2025 will be delivered for a total of 11 petitions.

1:30 pm: What are the CLAT 2025 UG Cases About?

The CLAT UG cases are related to mistakes in the CLAT 2025 final answer key published by the Consortium of NLUs.

1:08 pm: What are the CLAT UG cases to which the Delhi HC will deliver its judgement?

The judgement will be delivered for a total of 11 petitions in the CLAT UG 2025 exam. The list of cases is mentioned above.

12:52 pm: Division Bench Members for the CLAT 2025 Delhi HC Hearing Today

A bench of Chief Justice D K Upadhyaya and Justice Tushar Rao Gedela will pass the verdict on CLAT UG results 2025 today.

12:16 pm: At what time will the CLAT UG 2025 Judgement be delivered?

As per the pronouncement of judgement uploaded on the Delhi HC's website, a bench of Chief Justice D K Upadhyaya and Justice Tushar Rao Gedela will pass the verdict at 2:30 pm.

April 23, 2025, 11: 56 am: CLAT 2025 Hearing Today

The Delhi High Court is scheduled to pronounce today at 2:30 pm regarding a batch of petitions challenging the CLAT UG 2025 results.

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Questions related to CLAT

Have a question related to CLAT ?

Hello ,

As per your mentioned query , it is possible to crack CLAT exam in 7 months if the preparation will be done with dedication and consistency. To start the preparation i am sharing some tips i hope this helps you :

  1. First, analyse the syllabus of the exam. Read it thoroughly and try to know what exam demands.
  2. Start with basics as it makes your foundation strong.
  3. After that practice questions more and more so that it will enhance your speed of calculation.
  4. Give mocks as you will manage your time accordingly.
  5. Give previous year question papers so that you will get to know the level of exam.
  6. Atlast revision is important. Try to revise the concepts weekly.

To know more , kindly go through the given link:

https://law.careers360.com/articles/how-prepare-for-clat

Good luck !

Books for CLAT preparation:

1)Objective General English by N.Khurmi and George

2)General knowledge by Lucent Publications

3) Legal awareness and Legal reasoning by Pearson

4) Verbal and Non-verbal reasoning by R.S.Aggrawal

5)Quantitative aptitude by R.S.Aggrawal

Based on your score of 42/120 in the CLAT 2026 mock test, it's difficult to provide an exact rank as the rank depends on the overall performance of candidates. However, with a score like this, you may expect a rank in the mid to lower range, potentially beyond 2000, but this can vary.

If you scored 42/120 in a mock CLAT test for 2026, your estimated rank would be around 32,500 . This is based on a general distribution of marks. However, the actual rank can vary depending on the difficulty of the exam, the performance of other candidates, and the competition on the test day.

CLAT 2025 marks vs rank

You can directly contact the admission office of SOA University to inquire about the possibility of applying for the BBA LLB course without having appeared for the SAAT or CLAT exams. They may offer alternative admission processes or counseling options for such cases.

View All

Read the passage carefully and answer the question

The Contract should be performed by the promisor himself. However, in certain cases, it can also be performed by his agents or legal representatives. It all depends upon the intention of the parties. Normally a contract can be performed by the following persons. 

  1. Promisor himself: If from the nature of the contract it appears that it was the intention of the parties that the promise should be performed by the promisor himself, such promise must be performed by the promisor. This usually applies to contracts involving personal skill, task, or artwork. 
  2. Promisor or his Agent: Where the contract does not involve the personal skill of the promisor, the contract could be performed by the promisor himself or by any competent person employed by him for the purpose, 
  3. Legal Representatives: The contracts which do not involve any personal skill or taste, may be performed by his legal representative after the death of the promisor.
  4. Third Person: In some cases, a contract may be performed by a third person provided the promisee accepts the arrangement. According to Section 41 of the Indian Contract Act, once the promisee accepts the performance from a third person, he cannot compel the promisor to perform the contract again. 
  5. Performance of Joint Promises: According to section 42 of the Indian Contract Act, when two or more persons have made a joint promise, the joint promisors must fulfill the promise jointly during their lifetime. And if any one of them dies, then his legal representatives and survivors must jointly fulfill the promise. 

Section 43 of the Indian Contract Act further provides that unless a contrary intention appears from the contract, each joint promisor may compel every other joint promisor to contribute equally to the performance of the promise. If any joint promisor makes a default in such contribution, the remaining joint promisors must bear the loss arising from such default in equal shares.

Question:

Aman received a box of chocolates from Basant and promised to pay Rupees 5000. Later on, A becomes bankrupt. Chetan who is a friend of Aman pays rupees 1000 to Besant on behalf of Aman. Aman is not aware of such a transaction. In civil court, insolvency proceedings have started against Aman. Meanwhile, Basant has also applied for a recovery of 5000 rupees. Decide.

Option: 1

Basant is entitled to recover the amount of 5000 from Aman.


Option: 2

Basant is entitled to recover the amount of 4000 from Aman.


Option: 3

Chetan is entitled to recover the amount of 1000 from Basant.


Option: 4

Basant cannot recover any amount from Aman as he has become insolvent.


Read the passage carefully and answer the question

The Contract should be performed by the promisor himself. However, in certain cases, it can also be performed by his agents or legal representatives. It all depends upon the intention of the parties. Normally a contract can be performed by the following persons. 

  1. Promisor himself: If from the nature of the contract it appears that it was the intention of the parties that the promise should be performed by the promisor himself, such promise must be performed by the promisor. This usually applies to contracts involving personal skill, task, or artwork. 
  2. Promisor or his Agent: Where the contract does not involve the personal skill of the promisor, the contract could be performed by the promisor himself or by any competent person employed by him for the purpose, 
  3. Legal Representatives: The contracts which do not involve any personal skill or taste, may be performed by his legal representative after the death of the promisor.
  4. Third Person: In some cases, a contract may be performed by a third person provided the promisee accepts the arrangement. According to Section 41 of the Indian Contract Act, once the promisee accepts the performance from a third person, he cannot compel the promisor to perform the contract again. 
  5. Performance of Joint Promises: According to section 42 of the Indian Contract Act, when two or more persons have made a joint promise, the joint promisors must fulfill the promise jointly during their lifetime. And if any one of them dies, then his legal representatives and survivors must jointly fulfill the promise. 

Section 43 of the Indian Contract Act further provides that unless a contrary intention appears from the contract, each joint promisor may compel every other joint promisor to contribute equally to the performance of the promise. If any joint promisor makes a default in such contribution, the remaining joint promisors must bear the loss arising from such default in equal shares.

Question:

K promises to paint a picture for L on a certain day, at a certain price. K dies before the day of the contract. Decide. 

Option: 1

The contract can be enforced by K’s representative 


Option: 2

The contract can be enforced by L


Option: 3

The contract can be enforced either by K’s representation or by L 


Option: 4

The contract cannot be enforced either by K’s representative, or L


Read the passage carefully and answer the question

The Contract should be performed by the promisor himself. However, in certain cases, it can also be performed by his agents or legal representatives. It all depends upon the intention of the parties. Normally a contract can be performed by the following persons. 

  1. Promisor himself: If from the nature of the contract it appears that it was the intention of the parties that the promise should be performed by the promisor himself, such promise must be performed by the promisor. This usually applies to contracts involving personal skill, task, or artwork. 
  2. Promisor or his Agent: Where the contract does not involve the personal skill of the promisor, the contract could be performed by the promisor himself or by any competent person employed by him for the purpose, 
  3. Legal Representatives: The contracts which do not involve any personal skill or taste, may be performed by his legal representative after the death of the promisor.
  4. Third Person: In some cases, a contract may be performed by a third person provided the promisee accepts the arrangement. According to Section 41 of the Indian Contract Act, once the promisee accepts the performance from a third person, he cannot compel the promisor to perform the contract again. 
  5. Performance of Joint Promises: According to section 42 of the Indian Contract Act, when two or more persons have made a joint promise, the joint promisors must fulfill the promise jointly during their lifetime. And if any one of them dies, then his legal representatives and survivors must jointly fulfill the promise. 

Section 43 of the Indian Contract Act further provides that unless a contrary intention appears from the contract, each joint promisor may compel every other joint promisor to contribute equally to the performance of the promise. If any joint promisor makes a default in such contribution, the remaining joint promisors must bear the loss arising from such default in equal shares.

Question:

Rohan has agreed to manage the catering services during the marriage of Sohan’s son Ramu. On the day of marriage, Rohan felt ill and sent his manager to the management of catering services. Ramu happily gets married to Tina and people appreciated the food and decoration of the event. When Rohan asked Sohan for the remaining amount, he denied it because Rohan himself had not managed so it is a breach. Decide.

 

Option: 1

Rohan is not entitled to get the remaining amount due to a breach of contract.


Option: 2

Rohan is entitled to sue Sohan for the remaining amount.


Option: 3

Rohan is entitled to sue Ramu because it was his marriage.


Option: 4

Instead of Rohan, his manager can only sue Sohan for the breach.


Read the passage and answer the question that follow.

Natural justice is another name for common sense justice rules of natural justice are not in codified form these principles are embedded or ingrained or inbuilt in the conscience of human beings. It supplies the omission made in codified law and helps in the administration of justice. Natural justice is not only confined to ‘fairness’ it will take many shades and colours based on the context. Thus natural justice apart from ‘fairness’ also implies reasonableness, equity and equality. They are neither cast in a rigid mould nor can they be put in a legal straitjacket. These principles written by nature in the heart of mankind, they are immutable, inviolable, and inalienable.

It is true that the concept of natural justice is not very clear and, therefore, it is not possible to define it; yet the principles of natural justice are accepted and enforced. In the case of Ridge V. Baldwin Court observed that “in modern times have sometimes been expressed to the effect that natural justice is as vague as to be practically meaningless. But I would regard these as tainted by the perennial fallacy that because something cannot be cut and dried or nicely weighed or measured therefore it does not exist”. The term natural justice signifies fundamental rules of judicial procedure and fair play in action. According to Lord Widgery “the principles of natural justice were those fundamental rules; the breach will prevent justice from being seen to be done”. Earliest expression of ‘natural justice’ could be found in the philosophical expression of Roman Jurist (jus natural) and signified rules and principles for the conduct of man which were independent of enacted law or customs and could be discovered by the rational intelligence of man and would grow out of and conform to his nature.

The rule against bias that surfaced in 1610 in Dr Bonham's Casewhere Chief Justice Coke went so far as to say that the Court could declare an Act of Parliament void if it made a man as judge in his own cause, or otherwise ‘against common right and reason’. This was one of his grounds for disallowing the claim of the College of Physicians to fine and imprison Doctor Bonham, a Doctor of Physics of Cambridge University, for practising in the city of London without the licence of College of Physicians. The statute under which the College acted provided that fines should go half to the King half to the College so that the College had a financial interest in its own judgement and was judged in its own cause.

Question:

X is a student of a college and his father Y is a professor in the same college. In one instance, X is caught to be involved in unparliamentary activities inside the college campus. The enquiry committee is set up and Y is appointed as the head of the committee. Decide.

Option: 1

Y is a professor of the same college hence he can become a member of the enquiry committee


Option: 2

Y is X’s father hence he should not be a part of the enquiry committee


Option: 3

Y can be a part of the enquiry committee but cannot be its head


Option: 4

There is no rule that prevents the appointment of Y until he fulfils his function diligently


Read the passage and answer the question that follow.

Natural justice is another name for common sense justice rules of natural justice are not in codified form these principles are embedded or ingrained or inbuilt in the conscience of human beings. It supplies the omission made in codified law and helps in the administration of justice. Natural justice is not only confined to ‘fairness’ it will take many shades and colours based on the context. Thus natural justice apart from ‘fairness’ also implies reasonableness, equity and equality. They are neither cast in a rigid mould nor can they be put in a legal straitjacket. These principles written by nature in the heart of mankind, they are immutable, inviolable, and inalienable.

It is true that the concept of natural justice is not very clear and, therefore, it is not possible to define it; yet the principles of natural justice are accepted and enforced. In the case of Ridge V. Baldwin Court observed that “in modern times have sometimes been expressed to the effect that natural justice is as vague as to be practically meaningless. But I would regard these as tainted by the perennial fallacy that because something cannot be cut and dried or nicely weighed or measured therefore it does not exist”. The term natural justice signifies fundamental rules of judicial procedure and fair play in action. According to Lord Widgery “the principles of natural justice were those fundamental rules; the breach will prevent justice from being seen to be done”. Earliest expression of ‘natural justice’ could be found in the philosophical expression of Roman Jurist (jus natural) and signified rules and principles for the conduct of man which were independent of enacted law or customs and could be discovered by the rational intelligence of man and would grow out of and conform to his nature.

The rule against bias that surfaced in 1610 in Dr Bonham's Casewhere Chief Justice Coke went so far as to say that the Court could declare an Act of Parliament void if it made a man as judge in his own cause, or otherwise ‘against common right and reason’. This was one of his grounds for disallowing the claim of the College of Physicians to fine and imprison Doctor Bonham, a Doctor of Physics of Cambridge University, for practising in the city of London without the licence of College of Physicians. The statute under which the College acted provided that fines should go half to the King half to the College so that the College had a financial interest in its own judgement and was judged in its own cause.

Question:

Mr X is an employee of a corporate office. His wife Y is a judge. In one instance, X is found to be involved in a money laundering case at his office. The office now files a suit and Y is appointed as the judge for this case. Decide.

Option: 1

Y is a judge by herself, hence can be appointed to adjudicate this case


Option: 2

Y is can be appointed as a judge only if she fulfils her responsibilities without any bias


Option: 3

Y can adjudicate the case and if the company finds the penalty to be insufficient then they can appeal against it


Option: 4

Y cannot be the judge in this case ab initio


Read the passage and answer the question that follow.

Natural justice is another name for common sense justice rules of natural justice are not in codified form these principles are embedded or ingrained or inbuilt in the conscience of human beings. It supplies the omission made in codified law and helps in the administration of justice. Natural justice is not only confined to ‘fairness’ it will take many shades and colours based on the context. Thus natural justice apart from ‘fairness’ also implies reasonableness, equity and equality. They are neither cast in a rigid mould nor can they be put in a legal straitjacket. These principles written by nature in the heart of mankind, they are immutable, inviolable, and inalienable.

It is true that the concept of natural justice is not very clear and, therefore, it is not possible to define it; yet the principles of natural justice are accepted and enforced. In the case of Ridge V. Baldwin Court observed that “in modern times have sometimes been expressed to the effect that natural justice is as vague as to be practically meaningless. But I would regard these as tainted by the perennial fallacy that because something cannot be cut and dried or nicely weighed or measured therefore it does not exist”. The term natural justice signifies fundamental rules of judicial procedure and fair play in action. According to Lord Widgery “the principles of natural justice were those fundamental rules; the breach will prevent justice from being seen to be done”. Earliest expression of ‘natural justice’ could be found in the philosophical expression of Roman Jurist (jus natural) and signified rules and principles for the conduct of man which were independent of enacted law or customs and could be discovered by the rational intelligence of man and would grow out of and conform to his nature.

The rule against bias that surfaced in 1610 in Dr Bonham's Casewhere Chief Justice Coke went so far as to say that the Court could declare an Act of Parliament void if it made a man as judge in his own cause, or otherwise ‘against common right and reason’. This was one of his grounds for disallowing the claim of the College of Physicians to fine and imprison Doctor Bonham, a Doctor of Physics of Cambridge University, for practising in the city of London without the licence of College of Physicians. The statute under which the College acted provided that fines should go half to the King half to the College so that the College had a financial interest in its own judgement and was judged in its own cause.

Question:

X was a renowned cricketer in the 1980s. His son Y is a struggling cricketer who has been trying to get into the national team for many years. In the year 2020, X is appointed as a member of the selection committee. In the match which is supposed to decide the final team of the nation, Y scores a century and Z scores 65 runs. However, Z is selected to represent India and Y is not. Y now appeals against the decision, the main ground being the presence of X in the committee. Decide.

Option: 1

The appeal will stand as Y scored a century yet Z was selected after scoring 65 runs


Option: 2

The appeal will be quashed since X’s presence should have benefitted Y, but it didn’t, hence the rejection of Y is valid


Option: 3

The appeal will stand as X’s presence is a factor of bias


Option: 4

The appeal will be quashed since X was a renowned cricketer


Read the passage and answer the question that follow.

Natural justice is another name for common sense justice rules of natural justice are not in codified form these principles are embedded or ingrained or inbuilt in the conscience of human beings. It supplies the omission made in codified law and helps in the administration of justice. Natural justice is not only confined to ‘fairness’ it will take many shades and colours based on the context. Thus natural justice apart from ‘fairness’ also implies reasonableness, equity and equality. They are neither cast in a rigid mould nor can they be put in a legal straitjacket. These principles written by nature in the heart of mankind, they are immutable, inviolable, and inalienable.

It is true that the concept of natural justice is not very clear and, therefore, it is not possible to define it; yet the principles of natural justice are accepted and enforced. In the case of Ridge V. Baldwin Court observed that “in modern times have sometimes been expressed to the effect that natural justice is as vague as to be practically meaningless. But I would regard these as tainted by the perennial fallacy that because something cannot be cut and dried or nicely weighed or measured therefore it does not exist”. The term natural justice signifies fundamental rules of judicial procedure and fair play in action. According to Lord Widgery “the principles of natural justice were those fundamental rules; the breach will prevent justice from being seen to be done”. Earliest expression of ‘natural justice’ could be found in the philosophical expression of Roman Jurist (jus natural) and signified rules and principles for the conduct of man which were independent of enacted law or customs and could be discovered by the rational intelligence of man and would grow out of and conform to his nature.

The rule against bias that surfaced in 1610 in Dr Bonham's Casewhere Chief Justice Coke went so far as to say that the Court could declare an Act of Parliament void if it made a man as judge in his own cause, or otherwise ‘against common right and reason’. This was one of his grounds for disallowing the claim of the College of Physicians to fine and imprison Doctor Bonham, a Doctor of Physics of Cambridge University, for practising in the city of London without the licence of College of Physicians. The statute under which the College acted provided that fines should go half to the King half to the College so that the College had a financial interest in its own judgement and was judged in its own cause.

Question:

X is a married judge who is well known for his honesty in the entire city. He has a son Y. One fine day Y gets kidnapped and the kidnapper demands a sum of 20 lakhs from X. However, the kidnapper is caught by the police. X is now appointed as the judge for the hearing of the kidnapper. Decide.

Option: 1

X can be the judge since he can decide the punishment better as he was the sufferer


Option: 2

X cannot be the judge since there is a possibility that he will be biased while delivering the judgement


Option: 3

X can be the judge since he is renowned for his honesty and fulfil his duties


Option: 4

X can be the judge but his statement can be appealed against if delivered with bias


Read the passage and answer the question that follow.

Natural justice is another name for common sense justice rules of natural justice are not in codified form these principles are embedded or ingrained or inbuilt in the conscience of human beings. It supplies the omission made in codified law and helps in the administration of justice. Natural justice is not only confined to ‘fairness’ it will take many shades and colours based on the context. Thus natural justice apart from ‘fairness’ also implies reasonableness, equity and equality. They are neither cast in a rigid mould nor can they be put in a legal straitjacket. These principles written by nature in the heart of mankind, they are immutable, inviolable, and inalienable.

It is true that the concept of natural justice is not very clear and, therefore, it is not possible to define it; yet the principles of natural justice are accepted and enforced. In the case of Ridge V. Baldwin Court observed that “in modern times have sometimes been expressed to the effect that natural justice is as vague as to be practically meaningless. But I would regard these as tainted by the perennial fallacy that because something cannot be cut and dried or nicely weighed or measured therefore it does not exist”. The term natural justice signifies fundamental rules of judicial procedure and fair play in action. According to Lord Widgery “the principles of natural justice were those fundamental rules; the breach will prevent justice from being seen to be done”. Earliest expression of ‘natural justice’ could be found in the philosophical expression of Roman Jurist (jus natural) and signified rules and principles for the conduct of man which were independent of enacted law or customs and could be discovered by the rational intelligence of man and would grow out of and conform to his nature.

The rule against bias that surfaced in 1610 in Dr Bonham's Casewhere Chief Justice Coke went so far as to say that the Court could declare an Act of Parliament void if it made a man as judge in his own cause, or otherwise ‘against common right and reason’. This was one of his grounds for disallowing the claim of the College of Physicians to fine and imprison Doctor Bonham, a Doctor of Physics of Cambridge University, for practising in the city of London without the licence of College of Physicians. The statute under which the College acted provided that fines should go half to the King half to the College so that the College had a financial interest in its own judgement and was judged in its own cause.

Question:

X and Y have been married for five years. X is a judge and Y is a doctor. X is pretty much unhappy with his married life so he wants to divorce Y. Y refuses to agree to a divorce by mutual consent hence X files a suit against Y. Decide.

Option: 1

X cannot file a suit since he is a judge


Option: 2

X can file a suit against Y in legal capacity but not as a judge


Option: 3

X cannot file a divorce suit against Y since there is no valid ground for divorce


Option: 4

X can proceed with mutual consent but not contested divorce


Read the passage and answer the question that follow.

In the case of M/S Halonex Limited, 59-A Noida vs State of U.P., it was held that “In reply to the aforesaid submission, learned counsel for opposite party no.2 submitted that the case of the applicants that no amount is due from their side to the complainant is a matter of defence which cannot be considered at this stage. It has been submitted that the term 'entrustment' as used in Section 405 IPC has been given a wider interpretation. It has been submitted that the goods returned by the complainant to the Company for replacement or for reimbursement would be deemed to have been entrusted to the Company and as the applicants 2 & 3 were handling its affair they become responsible. To buttress the said submission, the learned counsel for the complainant drew the attention of the Court to a decision of the Apex Court in the case of Ram Narayan Popli Vs. Central Bureau of Investigation: (2003) 3 SCC 641, wherein it was observed that: "the term "entrustment" is not necessarily a term of law. It may have different implications in different contexts. In its most general signification all it imports is the handing over possession for some purpose which may not imply the conferring of any proprietary right at all." Attention was also drawn to an observation made in the judgment of the aforesaid case, where it was observed that: "to establish the charge of criminal breach of trust, the prosecution is not obliged to prove the precise mode of conversion, misappropriation or misapplication by the accused of the property entrusted to him or over which he has dominion. The principal ingredient of the offence being dishonest misappropriation or conversion which may not ordinarily be a matter of direct proof, entrustment of property and failure in breach of an obligation to account for the property entrusted if proved, may, in the light of other circumstances, justifiably lead to an inference of dishonest misappropriation or conversion”.

Question:

X tracks down an expensive necklace on the road. Not knowing to whom it belongs. X sells it promptly to a jeweller without attempting to find the owner or submitting the necklace to the authorities. Decide the liability of X.

Option: 1

Extortion


Option: 2

Criminal breach of trust


Option: 3

Theft


Option: 4

Criminal misappropriation of Property


Read the passage and answer the question that follow.

In the case of M/S Halonex Limited, 59-A Noida vs State of U.P., it was held that “In reply to the aforesaid submission, learned counsel for opposite party no.2 submitted that the case of the applicants that no amount is due from their side to the complainant is a matter of defence which cannot be considered at this stage. It has been submitted that the term 'entrustment' as used in Section 405 IPC has been given a wider interpretation. It has been submitted that the goods returned by the complainant to the Company for replacement or for reimbursement would be deemed to have been entrusted to the Company and as the applicants 2 & 3 were handling its affair they become responsible. To buttress the said submission, the learned counsel for the complainant drew the attention of the Court to a decision of the Apex Court in the case of Ram Narayan Popli Vs. Central Bureau of Investigation: (2003) 3 SCC 641, wherein it was observed that: "the term "entrustment" is not necessarily a term of law. It may have different implications in different contexts. In its most general signification all it imports is the handing over possession for some purpose which may not imply the conferring of any proprietary right at all." Attention was also drawn to an observation made in the judgment of the aforesaid case, where it was observed that: "to establish the charge of criminal breach of trust, the prosecution is not obliged to prove the precise mode of conversion, misappropriation or misapplication by the accused of the property entrusted to him or over which he has dominion. The principal ingredient of the offence being dishonest misappropriation or conversion which may not ordinarily be a matter of direct proof, entrustment of property and failure in breach of an obligation to account for the property entrusted if proved, may, in the light of other circumstances, justifiably lead to an inference of dishonest misappropriation or conversion”.

Question:

P borrows from L his phone for using it to call his parents. However, when L is distracted, P removes the memory card of the phone and later on sells it. Decide the liability of P.

Option: 1

P is guilty under dishonest misappropriation of property

 


Option: 2

P is not guilty for any offence since the phone was given with consent


Option: 3

P is guilty for theft


Option: 4

P has been handed over the phone, so he has the right to use it as he likes


Lawyer

A lawyer is a professional who practises law. An Individual in the lawyer career path defends his or her client's cases and makes arguments on his or her behalf in both criminal and civil proceedings. A lawyer may advise and assist clients on how they should handle their legal issues. An individual as a career in law in India is considered one of the most sought-after careers.

A lawyer's job requires inhibiting skills. It involves practical applications of abstract legal theories and knowledge to solve specialised individual problems or to facilitate the interests of those who hire a lawyer to perform legal services. Here, in this article, we will discuss how to become a lawyer after 10th, is lawyer a good career in India, and how to become a lawyer in India.

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