Forwarded from π LAW STUDENTS Β© π (ASIF ALI)
π° Provisions as to Introduction and Passing of Bills in Parliament π°
https://youtube.com/c/LAWEXPLORER
1οΈβ£ Types of Bills
π― Ordinary Bills β Any bill other than Money/Finance/Constitution Amendment Bill.
π― Money Bills β Related to taxation, borrowing, expenditure from Consolidated Fund (Art. 110).
π― Finance Bills β Financial matters, but not strictly Money Bills.
π― Constitution Amendment Bills β Amendments under Art. 368.
https://youtube.com/c/LAWEXPLORER
2οΈβ£ Ordinary Bills (Art. 107)
Can be introduced in either House (Lok Sabha or Rajya Sabha).
Stages in Passing:
π First Reading β Introduction & publication.
π Second Reading β General discussion, committee stage, clause-by-clause consideration.
π Third Reading β Debate & voting.
Must be passed by a simple majority in both Houses.
If disagreement: Joint Sitting (Art. 108), summoned by the President.
Requires Presidentβs assent to become law.
https://youtube.com/c/LAWEXPLORER
3οΈβ£ Money Bills (Art. 110 & 109)
πΆ Can be introduced only in Lok Sabha, on the recommendation of the President.
πΆ Rajya Sabha cannot amend/reject, can only recommend changes within 14 days.
πΆ Lok Sabha may accept or reject recommendations.
πΆ Final authority rests with Lok Sabha.
πΆ Requires Presidentβs assent.
https://youtube.com/c/LAWEXPLORER
4οΈβ£ Finance Bills
Type I (Art. 117(1)): Deals with taxation/expenditure from Consolidated Fund β same procedure as Money Bills.
Type II (Art. 117(3)): Involves financial matters, but follows procedure of an Ordinary Bill, with the condition of Presidentβs recommendation.
https://youtube.com/c/LAWEXPLORER
5οΈβ£ Constitution Amendment Bills (Art. 368)
π Can be introduced in either House.
π Must be passed in each House by special majority (2/3rd present and voting and majority of total membership).
π No joint sitting in case of disagreement.
π If it seeks to change federal provisions (e.g., representation of states, executive powers), it must be ratified by half of the State Legislatures.
π Requires Presidentβs assent.
https://youtube.com/c/LAWEXPLORER
6οΈβ£ Role of President
π― Ordinary Bills β May give assent, withhold or return (except Money Bills).
π― Money Bills β Can only give or withhold assent.
π― Constitution Amendment Bills β Must give assent; cannot withhold or return.
https://youtube.com/c/LAWEXPLORER
π΅ Conclusion
The Constitution provides different procedures for the passage of ordinary, money, finance and constitutional amendment bills to ensure checks and balances between both Houses of Parliament, the President and the States in a federal setup.
π Exam Tip: Always remember β
Art. 107β111 β Ordinary Bills
Art. 110 & 109 β Money Bills
Art. 117 β Finance Bills
Art. 368 β Constitutional Amendment Bills
https://youtube.com/c/LAWEXPLORER
1οΈβ£ Types of Bills
π― Ordinary Bills β Any bill other than Money/Finance/Constitution Amendment Bill.
π― Money Bills β Related to taxation, borrowing, expenditure from Consolidated Fund (Art. 110).
π― Finance Bills β Financial matters, but not strictly Money Bills.
π― Constitution Amendment Bills β Amendments under Art. 368.
https://youtube.com/c/LAWEXPLORER
2οΈβ£ Ordinary Bills (Art. 107)
Can be introduced in either House (Lok Sabha or Rajya Sabha).
Stages in Passing:
π First Reading β Introduction & publication.
π Second Reading β General discussion, committee stage, clause-by-clause consideration.
π Third Reading β Debate & voting.
Must be passed by a simple majority in both Houses.
If disagreement: Joint Sitting (Art. 108), summoned by the President.
Requires Presidentβs assent to become law.
https://youtube.com/c/LAWEXPLORER
3οΈβ£ Money Bills (Art. 110 & 109)
πΆ Can be introduced only in Lok Sabha, on the recommendation of the President.
πΆ Rajya Sabha cannot amend/reject, can only recommend changes within 14 days.
πΆ Lok Sabha may accept or reject recommendations.
πΆ Final authority rests with Lok Sabha.
πΆ Requires Presidentβs assent.
https://youtube.com/c/LAWEXPLORER
4οΈβ£ Finance Bills
Type I (Art. 117(1)): Deals with taxation/expenditure from Consolidated Fund β same procedure as Money Bills.
Type II (Art. 117(3)): Involves financial matters, but follows procedure of an Ordinary Bill, with the condition of Presidentβs recommendation.
https://youtube.com/c/LAWEXPLORER
5οΈβ£ Constitution Amendment Bills (Art. 368)
π Can be introduced in either House.
π Must be passed in each House by special majority (2/3rd present and voting and majority of total membership).
π No joint sitting in case of disagreement.
π If it seeks to change federal provisions (e.g., representation of states, executive powers), it must be ratified by half of the State Legislatures.
π Requires Presidentβs assent.
https://youtube.com/c/LAWEXPLORER
6οΈβ£ Role of President
π― Ordinary Bills β May give assent, withhold or return (except Money Bills).
π― Money Bills β Can only give or withhold assent.
π― Constitution Amendment Bills β Must give assent; cannot withhold or return.
https://youtube.com/c/LAWEXPLORER
π΅ Conclusion
The Constitution provides different procedures for the passage of ordinary, money, finance and constitutional amendment bills to ensure checks and balances between both Houses of Parliament, the President and the States in a federal setup.
π Exam Tip: Always remember β
Art. 107β111 β Ordinary Bills
Art. 110 & 109 β Money Bills
Art. 117 β Finance Bills
Art. 368 β Constitutional Amendment Bills
YouTube
LAW EXPLORER
This channel is an initiative for providing an aid towards legal study.
Forwarded from π LAW STUDENTS Β© π (ASIF ALI)
When BNSS came into force?
Anonymous Quiz
20%
o A) On 1st January 2024
60%
o B) On such date as the Central Government may notify
14%
o C) On 15th August 2023
5%
o D) On 26th January 2024
Forwarded from π LAW STUDENTS Β© π (ASIF ALI)
π° Joint Sitting of Both Houses of Parliament π°
https://youtube.com/c/LAWEXPLORER
π Constitutional Provision
Article 108 of Indian Constitution.
A mechanism to resolve a deadlock between Lok Sabha and Rajya Sabha over the passage of an ordinary bill.
Presided over by the Speaker of Lok Sabha (or Deputy Speaker; in his absence, the Deputy Chairman of Rajya Sabha).
https://youtube.com/c/LAWEXPLORER
π When is a Joint Sitting Summoned?
The President may summon a Joint Sitting if a bill (other than Money Bill/Constitution Amendment Bill) has been rejected or delayed by the Houses:
π¦If one House rejects the bill.
π¦If the Houses finally disagree on amendments.
π¦If more than 6 months lapse without the other House passing the bill.
https://youtube.com/c/LAWEXPLORER
π Exceptions (No Joint Sitting)
Money Bills (Art. 110).
Constitution Amendment Bills (Art. 368).
https://youtube.com/c/LAWEXPLORER
π Procedure
At Joint Sitting β bill is passed by simple majority of members present and voting.
Lok Sabha dominates because it has more members.
https://youtube.com/c/LAWEXPLORER
π Important Joint Sittings Held
1961 β Dowry Prohibition Bill.
1978 β Banking Service Commission (Repeal) Bill.
2002 β Prevention of Terrorism Bill (POTA).
https://youtube.com/c/LAWEXPLORER
π Significance
Ensures legislative efficiency by resolving deadlocks.
Reflects the supremacy of Lok Sabha (directly elected House).
π Exam Tip: Always write β Art. 108, presiding officer = Speaker of Lok Sabha, not applicable to Money/Constitutional Amendment Bills + mention POTA 2002 example.
https://youtube.com/c/LAWEXPLORER
π Constitutional Provision
Article 108 of Indian Constitution.
A mechanism to resolve a deadlock between Lok Sabha and Rajya Sabha over the passage of an ordinary bill.
Presided over by the Speaker of Lok Sabha (or Deputy Speaker; in his absence, the Deputy Chairman of Rajya Sabha).
https://youtube.com/c/LAWEXPLORER
π When is a Joint Sitting Summoned?
The President may summon a Joint Sitting if a bill (other than Money Bill/Constitution Amendment Bill) has been rejected or delayed by the Houses:
π¦If one House rejects the bill.
π¦If the Houses finally disagree on amendments.
π¦If more than 6 months lapse without the other House passing the bill.
https://youtube.com/c/LAWEXPLORER
π Exceptions (No Joint Sitting)
Money Bills (Art. 110).
Constitution Amendment Bills (Art. 368).
https://youtube.com/c/LAWEXPLORER
π Procedure
At Joint Sitting β bill is passed by simple majority of members present and voting.
Lok Sabha dominates because it has more members.
https://youtube.com/c/LAWEXPLORER
π Important Joint Sittings Held
1961 β Dowry Prohibition Bill.
1978 β Banking Service Commission (Repeal) Bill.
2002 β Prevention of Terrorism Bill (POTA).
https://youtube.com/c/LAWEXPLORER
π Significance
Ensures legislative efficiency by resolving deadlocks.
Reflects the supremacy of Lok Sabha (directly elected House).
π Exam Tip: Always write β Art. 108, presiding officer = Speaker of Lok Sabha, not applicable to Money/Constitutional Amendment Bills + mention POTA 2002 example.
YouTube
LAW EXPLORER
This channel is an initiative for providing an aid towards legal study.
Forwarded from π LAW STUDENTS Β© π (ASIF ALI)
π° Money Bills π°
https://youtube.com/c/LAWEXPLORER
π Constitutional Provision
Article 110 of Indian Constitution.
A Money Bill is a bill that deals exclusively with matters relating to money β such as taxation, borrowing of money or expenditure from the Consolidated Fund of India.
https://youtube.com/c/LAWEXPLORER
π Definition (Art. 110(1))
A bill is deemed to be a Money Bill if it contains only provisions dealing with any or all of the following matters:
πΉ Imposition, abolition, remission, alteration or regulation of any tax.
πΉ Regulation of borrowing of money by the Government of India.
πΉ Custody of the Consolidated Fund of India or Contingency Fund of India and payment of money into or withdrawal from them.
πΉ Appropriation of money out of the Consolidated Fund.
πΉ Declaring any expenditure as charged on the Consolidated Fund.
πΉ Receipt of money on account of the Consolidated Fund or Public Account of India.
πΉ Any matter incidental to the above.
https://youtube.com/c/LAWEXPLORER
π Certification
The Speaker of the Lok Sabha decides whether a bill is a Money Bill and his decision is final (Art. 110(3)).
https://youtube.com/c/LAWEXPLORER
π Special Procedure
πΈ Can be introduced only in Lok Sabha, on recommendation of the President.
πΈ Rajya Sabha cannot reject/amend; it can only make recommendations within 14 days.
πΈ Lok Sabha may accept or reject those recommendations.
https://youtube.com/c/LAWEXPLORER
π Case Reference
Rojer Mathew v. South Indian Bank (2019): Supreme Court held that Speakerβs certification of a Money Bill is subject to judicial review in limited cases.
β Exam Tip: Always mention β Art. 110, Speakerβs final authority, only in Lok Sabha, Rajya Sabhaβs limited role.
https://youtube.com/c/LAWEXPLORER
π Constitutional Provision
Article 110 of Indian Constitution.
A Money Bill is a bill that deals exclusively with matters relating to money β such as taxation, borrowing of money or expenditure from the Consolidated Fund of India.
https://youtube.com/c/LAWEXPLORER
π Definition (Art. 110(1))
A bill is deemed to be a Money Bill if it contains only provisions dealing with any or all of the following matters:
πΉ Imposition, abolition, remission, alteration or regulation of any tax.
πΉ Regulation of borrowing of money by the Government of India.
πΉ Custody of the Consolidated Fund of India or Contingency Fund of India and payment of money into or withdrawal from them.
πΉ Appropriation of money out of the Consolidated Fund.
πΉ Declaring any expenditure as charged on the Consolidated Fund.
πΉ Receipt of money on account of the Consolidated Fund or Public Account of India.
πΉ Any matter incidental to the above.
https://youtube.com/c/LAWEXPLORER
π Certification
The Speaker of the Lok Sabha decides whether a bill is a Money Bill and his decision is final (Art. 110(3)).
https://youtube.com/c/LAWEXPLORER
π Special Procedure
πΈ Can be introduced only in Lok Sabha, on recommendation of the President.
πΈ Rajya Sabha cannot reject/amend; it can only make recommendations within 14 days.
πΈ Lok Sabha may accept or reject those recommendations.
https://youtube.com/c/LAWEXPLORER
π Case Reference
Rojer Mathew v. South Indian Bank (2019): Supreme Court held that Speakerβs certification of a Money Bill is subject to judicial review in limited cases.
β Exam Tip: Always mention β Art. 110, Speakerβs final authority, only in Lok Sabha, Rajya Sabhaβs limited role.
YouTube
LAW EXPLORER
This channel is an initiative for providing an aid towards legal study.
Forwarded from π LAW STUDENTS Β© π (ASIF ALI)
The BNSS, 2023 replaces:
Anonymous Quiz
5%
o A) Indian Evidence Act
13%
o B) Indian Penal Code
77%
o C) Code of Criminal Procedure, 1973
4%
o D) Both A and B
Forwarded from π LAW STUDENTS Β© π (ASIF ALI)
BNSS applies to offences:
Anonymous Quiz
43%
o A) Only under the Indian Penal Code
50%
o B) Under any law in force
4%
o C) Only under special acts
3%
o D) Only under civil laws
Forwarded from π LAW STUDENTS Β© π (ASIF ALI)
Who is considered a "police officer" under BNSS?
Anonymous Quiz
8%
o A) Magistrate
7%
o B) Any member of the armed forces
78%
o C) A person appointed under the Police Act
7%
o D) None of the above
Forwarded from π LAW STUDENTS Β© π (ASIF ALI)
Forwarded from π LAW STUDENTS Β© π (ASIF ALI)
βCognizable offenceβ is defined as:
Anonymous Quiz
21%
o A) Offence where arrest cannot be made without warrant
7%
o B) Offence where police cannot take action
69%
o C) Offence where police may arrest without warrant
2%
o D) None of the above
Forwarded from π LAW STUDENTS Β© π (ASIF ALI)
Forwarded from π LAW STUDENTS Β© π (ASIF ALI)
"Investigation" under BNSS includes:
Anonymous Quiz
8%
β’ A) Only examination of accused
9%
β’ B) Trial by court
83%
β’ C) Collection of evidence by police
1%
β’ D) Passing of sentence
Forwarded from π LAW STUDENTS Β© π (ASIF ALI)
π° Annual Financial Statement π°
https://youtube.com/c/LAWEXPLORER
β° Constitutional Provision
Article 112, Indian Constitution.
Known as the Union Budget.
It is a statement of the estimated receipts and expenditure of the Government of India for a financial year (1st April β 31st March).
β° Contents of the Annual Financial Statement
https://youtube.com/c/LAWEXPLORER
β° The statement shows expenditure and receipts under three heads:
1οΈβ£ Consolidated Fund of India
All revenues received, loans raised and all money received in repayment of loans.
All expenditures are made from this fund, subject to parliamentary approval.
https://youtube.com/c/LAWEXPLORER
2οΈβ£ Contingency Fund of India
Placed at the disposal of the President.
To meet unforeseen or urgent expenditure.
https://youtube.com/c/LAWEXPLORER
3οΈβ£ Public Account of India
Transactions relating to provident funds, small savings, deposits, etc.
The government acts as a banker/trustee and no parliamentary approval is needed to withdraw.
https://youtube.com/c/LAWEXPLORER
β° Procedure
β‘οΈ Presentation β By the Finance Minister in Lok Sabha.
β‘οΈ General Discussion β Both Houses discuss principles, not details.
β‘οΈ Voting on Demands for Grants β Lok Sabha votes (only on Consolidated Fund expenditures).
β‘οΈ Appropriation Bill β To authorize withdrawal from the Consolidated Fund.
β‘οΈ Finance Bill β To give effect to taxation proposals.
https://youtube.com/c/LAWEXPLORER
β° Significance
The Annual Financial Statement ensures financial accountability of the executive to the legislature.
Serves as the primary tool of parliamentary control over the nationβs finances.
π Exam Tip: Always write β Art. 112, Union Budget, three parts: Consolidated Fund, Contingency Fund, Public Account.
https://youtube.com/c/LAWEXPLORER
β° Constitutional Provision
Article 112, Indian Constitution.
Known as the Union Budget.
It is a statement of the estimated receipts and expenditure of the Government of India for a financial year (1st April β 31st March).
β° Contents of the Annual Financial Statement
https://youtube.com/c/LAWEXPLORER
β° The statement shows expenditure and receipts under three heads:
1οΈβ£ Consolidated Fund of India
All revenues received, loans raised and all money received in repayment of loans.
All expenditures are made from this fund, subject to parliamentary approval.
https://youtube.com/c/LAWEXPLORER
2οΈβ£ Contingency Fund of India
Placed at the disposal of the President.
To meet unforeseen or urgent expenditure.
https://youtube.com/c/LAWEXPLORER
3οΈβ£ Public Account of India
Transactions relating to provident funds, small savings, deposits, etc.
The government acts as a banker/trustee and no parliamentary approval is needed to withdraw.
https://youtube.com/c/LAWEXPLORER
β° Procedure
β‘οΈ Presentation β By the Finance Minister in Lok Sabha.
β‘οΈ General Discussion β Both Houses discuss principles, not details.
β‘οΈ Voting on Demands for Grants β Lok Sabha votes (only on Consolidated Fund expenditures).
β‘οΈ Appropriation Bill β To authorize withdrawal from the Consolidated Fund.
β‘οΈ Finance Bill β To give effect to taxation proposals.
https://youtube.com/c/LAWEXPLORER
β° Significance
The Annual Financial Statement ensures financial accountability of the executive to the legislature.
Serves as the primary tool of parliamentary control over the nationβs finances.
π Exam Tip: Always write β Art. 112, Union Budget, three parts: Consolidated Fund, Contingency Fund, Public Account.
YouTube
LAW EXPLORER
This channel is an initiative for providing an aid towards legal study.
Forwarded from π LAW STUDENTS Β© π (ASIF ALI)
Who is a "Magistrate" as per BNSS?
Anonymous Quiz
2%
β’ A) Any police officer
91%
β’ B) Any Executive Magistrate or Judicial Magistrate
5%
β’ C) Only District Judge
2%
β’ D) None of the above
Forwarded from π LAW STUDENTS Β© π (ASIF ALI)
π° Legislative Powers of the President π°
https://youtube.com/c/LAWEXPLORER
π Constitutional Basis
Articles 85, 111, 123, 352 etc.
The President, though part of the Executive, is also an integral part of Parliament (Art. 79).
https://youtube.com/c/LAWEXPLORER
1οΈβ£ Power to Summon, Prorogue and Dissolve Parliament
Summons each session of Parliament (Art. 85).
Can prorogue (end) a session.
Can dissolve the Lok Sabha on the advice of the Prime Minister.
https://youtube.com/c/LAWEXPLORER
2οΈβ£ Addressing Parliament
Addresses both Houses at the beginning of the first session after every general election and at the first session of each year (Art. 87).
https://youtube.com/c/LAWEXPLORER
3οΈβ£ Nomination of Members
Can nominate 12 members to Rajya Sabha (eminent persons in art, literature, science, social service).
Can nominate 2 members of Anglo-Indian community to Lok Sabha (Art. 331) β provision abolished by 104th Constitutional Amendment, 2019.
https://youtube.com/c/LAWEXPLORER
4οΈβ£ Assent to Bills
A bill becomes law only after the Presidentβs assent (Art. 111).
π¦ Options:
π Give assent.
π Withhold assent.
π Return the bill (if not a Money Bill) for reconsideration.
If repassed, he must give assent.
https://youtube.com/c/LAWEXPLORER
5οΈβ£ Money Bills
Can be introduced in Lok Sabha only with Presidentβs recommendation (Art. 110, 117).
https://youtube.com/c/LAWEXPLORER
6οΈβ£ Ordinance-Making Power (Art. 123)
Can promulgate ordinances when Parliament is not in session.
Ordinances have the same force as laws of Parliament, but must be approved within 6 weeks of reassembly.
https://youtube.com/c/LAWEXPLORER
7οΈβ£ Other Powers
Lays reports like CAG, Finance Commission, UPSC before Parliament.
Prior sanction required before introducing certain bills (e.g., bills involving expenditure from Consolidated Fund).
https://youtube.com/c/LAWEXPLORER
π Conclusion
The Presidentβs legislative powers ensure that he functions as an integral link between the Executive and Legislature, with significant influence through summoning, assent, ordinance-making and recommendation powers.
π Exam Tip: Always remember β Art. 85 (sessions), Art. 87 (address), Art. 111 (assent), Art. 123 (ordinances).
https://youtube.com/c/LAWEXPLORER
π Constitutional Basis
Articles 85, 111, 123, 352 etc.
The President, though part of the Executive, is also an integral part of Parliament (Art. 79).
https://youtube.com/c/LAWEXPLORER
1οΈβ£ Power to Summon, Prorogue and Dissolve Parliament
Summons each session of Parliament (Art. 85).
Can prorogue (end) a session.
Can dissolve the Lok Sabha on the advice of the Prime Minister.
https://youtube.com/c/LAWEXPLORER
2οΈβ£ Addressing Parliament
Addresses both Houses at the beginning of the first session after every general election and at the first session of each year (Art. 87).
https://youtube.com/c/LAWEXPLORER
3οΈβ£ Nomination of Members
Can nominate 12 members to Rajya Sabha (eminent persons in art, literature, science, social service).
Can nominate 2 members of Anglo-Indian community to Lok Sabha (Art. 331) β provision abolished by 104th Constitutional Amendment, 2019.
https://youtube.com/c/LAWEXPLORER
4οΈβ£ Assent to Bills
A bill becomes law only after the Presidentβs assent (Art. 111).
π¦ Options:
π Give assent.
π Withhold assent.
π Return the bill (if not a Money Bill) for reconsideration.
If repassed, he must give assent.
https://youtube.com/c/LAWEXPLORER
5οΈβ£ Money Bills
Can be introduced in Lok Sabha only with Presidentβs recommendation (Art. 110, 117).
https://youtube.com/c/LAWEXPLORER
6οΈβ£ Ordinance-Making Power (Art. 123)
Can promulgate ordinances when Parliament is not in session.
Ordinances have the same force as laws of Parliament, but must be approved within 6 weeks of reassembly.
https://youtube.com/c/LAWEXPLORER
7οΈβ£ Other Powers
Lays reports like CAG, Finance Commission, UPSC before Parliament.
Prior sanction required before introducing certain bills (e.g., bills involving expenditure from Consolidated Fund).
https://youtube.com/c/LAWEXPLORER
π Conclusion
The Presidentβs legislative powers ensure that he functions as an integral link between the Executive and Legislature, with significant influence through summoning, assent, ordinance-making and recommendation powers.
π Exam Tip: Always remember β Art. 85 (sessions), Art. 87 (address), Art. 111 (assent), Art. 123 (ordinances).
YouTube
LAW EXPLORER
This channel is an initiative for providing an aid towards legal study.
Forwarded from π LAW STUDENTS Β© π (ASIF ALI)
Which section of BNSS defines the classes of Criminal Courts?
Anonymous Quiz
27%
o A) Section 5
55%
o B) Section 6
13%
o C) Section 7
5%
o D) Section 8
Forwarded from π LAW STUDENTS Β© π (ASIF ALI)
π° The Union Judiciary π°
https://youtube.com/c/LAWEXPLORER
π‘ Constitutional Basis
Part V, Chapter IV (Articles 124β147) of the Indian Constitution.
Deals with the Supreme Court of India β the highest judicial authority.
https://youtube.com/c/LAWEXPLORER
1οΈβ£ Composition of the Supreme Court (Art. 124)
Comprises the Chief Justice of India (CJI) and other judges.
Number of judges determined by Parliament (currently 34 including CJI).
https://youtube.com/c/LAWEXPLORER
2οΈβ£ Appointment of Judges
Appointed by the President.
Consultation process (Collegium system): CJI + 4 senior-most judges recommend appointments/transfers.
https://youtube.com/c/LAWEXPLORER
π‘ Qualifications:
πΉ Citizen of India, and
πΉ Judge of a High Court for at least 5 years, or
πΉ Advocate in a High Court for at least 10 years, or
πΉ Distinguished jurist (in Presidentβs opinion).
https://youtube.com/c/LAWEXPLORER
3οΈβ£ Tenure & Removal
Hold office till 65 years of age.
Can resign by writing to the President.
Can be removed by the President on grounds of proved misbehavior or incapacity through impeachment process (Art. 124(4)) β requires special majority in both Houses of Parliament.
https://youtube.com/c/LAWEXPLORER
4οΈβ£ Jurisdiction and Powers
Original Jurisdiction (Art. 131) β Disputes between:
Centre and States, or
States inter se.
β«οΈ Writ Jurisdiction (Art. 32) β For enforcement of Fundamental Rights.
β«οΈ Appellate Jurisdiction (Arts. 132β134) β Appeals in constitutional, civil and criminal cases.
β«οΈ Advisory Jurisdiction (Art. 143) β President may seek opinion of the Supreme Court.
β«οΈ Judicial Review β Can declare laws unconstitutional if violative of Constitution.
β«οΈ Court of Record (Art. 129) β Judgments act as precedents; has power to punish for contempt.
https://youtube.com/c/LAWEXPLORER
5οΈβ£ Independence of Judiciary
Security of tenure.
Salaries and allowances charged on Consolidated Fund of India.
Removal only by special procedure.
Freedom to decide cases without executive interference.
https://youtube.com/c/LAWEXPLORER
6οΈβ£ Important Case Laws
πΈ Kesavananda Bharati v. State of Kerala (1973): Established Basic Structure Doctrine.
πΈ S.P. Gupta v. Union of India (1981): First Judges case.
πΈ Supreme Court Advocates-on-Record Association v. Union of India (1993): Second Judges case β Collegium system established.
πΈ NJAC Judgment (2015): Struck down NJAC Act, upheld Collegium.
https://youtube.com/c/LAWEXPLORER
π‘ Conclusion
The Union Judiciary, through the Supreme Court, acts as the guardian of the Constitution, protector of Fundamental Rights, and the final interpreter of law, ensuring the rule of law and judicial independence in India.
π Exam Tip: Always write β Articles 124β147, jurisdiction types, writ power under Art. 32, and Kesavananda Bharati (1973).
https://youtube.com/c/LAWEXPLORER
π‘ Constitutional Basis
Part V, Chapter IV (Articles 124β147) of the Indian Constitution.
Deals with the Supreme Court of India β the highest judicial authority.
https://youtube.com/c/LAWEXPLORER
1οΈβ£ Composition of the Supreme Court (Art. 124)
Comprises the Chief Justice of India (CJI) and other judges.
Number of judges determined by Parliament (currently 34 including CJI).
https://youtube.com/c/LAWEXPLORER
2οΈβ£ Appointment of Judges
Appointed by the President.
Consultation process (Collegium system): CJI + 4 senior-most judges recommend appointments/transfers.
https://youtube.com/c/LAWEXPLORER
π‘ Qualifications:
πΉ Citizen of India, and
πΉ Judge of a High Court for at least 5 years, or
πΉ Advocate in a High Court for at least 10 years, or
πΉ Distinguished jurist (in Presidentβs opinion).
https://youtube.com/c/LAWEXPLORER
3οΈβ£ Tenure & Removal
Hold office till 65 years of age.
Can resign by writing to the President.
Can be removed by the President on grounds of proved misbehavior or incapacity through impeachment process (Art. 124(4)) β requires special majority in both Houses of Parliament.
https://youtube.com/c/LAWEXPLORER
4οΈβ£ Jurisdiction and Powers
Original Jurisdiction (Art. 131) β Disputes between:
Centre and States, or
States inter se.
β«οΈ Writ Jurisdiction (Art. 32) β For enforcement of Fundamental Rights.
β«οΈ Appellate Jurisdiction (Arts. 132β134) β Appeals in constitutional, civil and criminal cases.
β«οΈ Advisory Jurisdiction (Art. 143) β President may seek opinion of the Supreme Court.
β«οΈ Judicial Review β Can declare laws unconstitutional if violative of Constitution.
β«οΈ Court of Record (Art. 129) β Judgments act as precedents; has power to punish for contempt.
https://youtube.com/c/LAWEXPLORER
5οΈβ£ Independence of Judiciary
Security of tenure.
Salaries and allowances charged on Consolidated Fund of India.
Removal only by special procedure.
Freedom to decide cases without executive interference.
https://youtube.com/c/LAWEXPLORER
6οΈβ£ Important Case Laws
πΈ Kesavananda Bharati v. State of Kerala (1973): Established Basic Structure Doctrine.
πΈ S.P. Gupta v. Union of India (1981): First Judges case.
πΈ Supreme Court Advocates-on-Record Association v. Union of India (1993): Second Judges case β Collegium system established.
πΈ NJAC Judgment (2015): Struck down NJAC Act, upheld Collegium.
https://youtube.com/c/LAWEXPLORER
π‘ Conclusion
The Union Judiciary, through the Supreme Court, acts as the guardian of the Constitution, protector of Fundamental Rights, and the final interpreter of law, ensuring the rule of law and judicial independence in India.
π Exam Tip: Always write β Articles 124β147, jurisdiction types, writ power under Art. 32, and Kesavananda Bharati (1973).
YouTube
LAW EXPLORER
This channel is an initiative for providing an aid towards legal study.
Forwarded from π LAW STUDENTS Β© π (ASIF ALI)
Which of the following is not a class of Criminal Court under BNSS?
Anonymous Quiz
4%
o A) Court of Session
14%
o B) Judicial Magistrate Second Class
80%
o C) Revenue Court
3%
o D) Chief Judicial Magistrate