- Home
- Topics
- Services
- Constitutional law
- Submit Articles
- Lawyers
- Laws
- My Account
- Members
Tags
Categories
- Administrative Law
- Animal Laws
- Arbitration
- Army laws
- Aviation Law
- Bangladesh Laws
- Banking & Finance laws
- Canada Law
- Civil Law
- Company Law
- Competition Law
- Constitutional law
- Consumer laws
- Contract Laws
- Criminal Law
- Cyber Law
- Disability Laws
- Education Law
- Elderly Law
- Election Law
- Election Laws
- Employment Law
- Environmental Law
- Family Law
- Food and Drugs
- Foreign laws
- Human Rights
- Immigration Law
- Insurance laws
- Intellectual Property
- International law
- Jurisprudence
- Juvenile Law
- Labour Law
- Land Laws
- Laws
- Legal Profession
- Lok Adalat
- Maritime Law
- Media laws
- Medico Legal
- Minority Laws
- Miscellaneous Laws
- Personal Laws
- Politics
- Property laws
- Sports Law
- Supreme Court
- Tax laws
- Technology laws
- Third Gender
- Torts Law
- Traffic Laws
- UAE Laws
- Uncategorized
- United Kingdom
- US Laws
- Woman Law
- In the Line of Uncertainty: Living and Working Under Fire in LWE-Affected Areas
- Night LRP in LWE-Affected Areas: Strategy, Sacrifice, and Silent Vigil
- A Case Study of Teitiota v. New Zealand (UN Human Rights Committee, 2020)
- Procedural Purity and the End of the Going Concern Safety Net
- Understanding Expenditure Sensitive Constituencies in Indian Elections
- Term Sheets in Investment Transactions: Legal Effect, Key Clauses, and Court Interpretation
- The 3-Hour Takedown: How India’s New IT Rules Are Reshaping the Digital Battlefield
- Differences Between FIR and NCR
India’s DPDP Act and Europe’s GDPR share a common goal of protecting personal data, but differ in scope and structure. While GDPR offers broader flexibility, the DPDP Act focuses on digital data, consent, and accountability. For global businesses, GDPR compliance alone isn’t enough; adapting to India’s DPDP is essential for full privacy readiness.
Factual Background The case arises out of a legal challenge filed by Ms. Siddiqua Begum Khan, the daughter and surviving…
Facts of the Case The matter arose out of an FIR No. 460/2024 dated 21st October 2024, registered under Sections…
Introduction To regulate crime in society, the State punishes criminals. There are various types of punishment backed by theories of…
How Indian Law Treats WhatsApp Messages as Electronic Evidence Most of us spend hours chatting on WhatsApp every day —…
Overview: Right To Be Forgotten The “Right to be Forgotten” is a modern legal concept that allows a person to…
Introduction In the criminal justice system, where the focus has always been on the culprit, victims are frequently ignored. However,…
Introduction The Mines and Minerals (Development and Regulation) Act, 1957 (MMDR Act) serves as the foundational legislative framework governing the…
Inherent Powers of the Civil Court under Code of Civil Procedure: Scope, Application and Limitations
The inherent powers of a civil court under the Code of Civil Procedure, 1908, reprsenet the judiciary’s residual authority to do complete justice where the procedural framework is silent or inadequate. Rooted in Section 151 and complemented by some provisions from Sections 148 to 153-A, these powers enable courts to secure the ends of justice and prevent abuse of process. While braod in scope, such powers remain circumscribed by the principle that they cannot contravene express statutory provisions or substitute prescribed remedies. Through judicial interpretation, including cases such as Vineeta Jamwal v. Col(Retd.) Vijay Singh and Salem Advocate Bar Association v. Union of India, the courts have reaffirmed that inherent powers serve as the safety valve of the Code, preserving the balance between procedural discipline and substantive justice.
T.N. Godavarman Thirumulpad v. Union of India: Landmark Environmental Case Introduction T.N. Godavarman Thirumulpad v. Union of India is a…
Subscribe to Updates
Get the latest Legal Updates from Legal Service India
India’s Oldest Independent Digital Legal Knowledge Platform
ISBN: 978-81-928510-0-6

