- Inalienable Nature: Even if an individual is using the land to perform services for a mosque, they do not own the title. The land remains "impressed with a public or religious trust."
- Burden of Proof: The Court clarified that the person claiming ownership (the plaintiff) must prove their own title with solid evidence. They cannot simply win because the Wakf Board's record-keeping might be weak.
- Self-Defeating Evidence: In this specific case, the plaintiffs tried to use a 1945 partition deed to prove ownership, but that very document described the land as "service inam," essentially proving the Wakf Board's case for them.
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Friday, April 24, 2026
‘Service Inam' Land Attached To Mosque Is Wakf Property, Can't Be Alienated : Supreme Court
Allahabad High Court Imposes ₹15 Lakh Costs On Husband For Filing False Affidavits In Maintenance Case Against Wife
Case Background and Petitioner's Claims (Sections 1-4)
Initial Filing: The petitioner (husband) filed a petition under Article 227 to expedite maintenance proceedings he initiated against his wife under Section 144 of the BNSS, 2023.
Marriage and Career: The parties married in 2019; the wife secured a government job as an Additional Private Secretary at the High Court, while the husband, despite having an LL.B. and being a registered advocate, remained unemployed.
Petitioner's Grievances: He alleged the wife misbehaved, filed false criminal cases against him, and humiliated him for his lack of income.
Financial Distress: He claimed to have no source of income, suffering from various health issues due to the stress of traveling for numerous litigations.
Respondent's Counter-Arguments (Section 5)
Allegations of Fraud: The wife contended the husband is a "compulsive liar" from a politically well-connected family who is capable of earning but chooses to seek "free money" to support a debauched lifestyle.
Financial Exploitation: She alleged he fraudulently took personal loans totaling over ₹25 lakhs from her salary account, which he spent on alcohol and luxury instead of purchasing land as promised.
Abuse and Theft: She claimed he subjected her to physical and mental cruelty, eventually running away with her household articles, jewelry, and car.
Existing Maintenance: The wife pointed out that the husband was already awarded ₹5,000 per month in interim maintenance in their pending divorce case.
Procedural History and Court Observations (Sections 6-9)
Inconsistent Attendance: The court noted the petitioner and his counsel frequently failed to appear for hearings or requested adjournments.
Concealment of Facts: An Amicus Curiae highlighted that the petitioner hid the fact that he was already receiving maintenance and that the very proceedings he wanted to "expedite" had already been stayed by another bench.
Financial Capacity: Evidence, including the petitioner's ITR, suggested he had a construction business and significant family property, contradicting his claim of being "wholly dependent".
Jurisprudential Deliberations and Legal Principles (Sections 10-31)
Ineligibility for Maintenance: The court observed that under Section 144 of the BNSS (formerly Section 125 Cr.PC), a husband is generally not entitled to claim maintenance from his wife.
Economic Abuse: The court discussed the concept of marriage as a partnership of equity, noting that the law must intervene when the relationship becomes a vehicle for "sustained economic and emotional exploitation".
Need for Restitution: It emphasized that compensatory costs should serve as a corrective measure to restore the economic dignity of an aggrieved spouse who has been financially depleted.
Final Judgment and Directions (Sections 32-39)
Dismissal and Costs: The court dismissed the petition as lacking bona fides and imposed a compensatory cost of ₹15,00,000 on the husband, to be paid to the wife within six weeks.
Expedited Divorce Trial: The Principal Judge of the Family Court in Prayagraj was directed to expedite the divorce proceedings and conclude them within the timeframe set by Section 21-B of the Hindu Marriage Act.
Security and Conduct: Specific directions were given for in-camera proceedings if necessary to ensure privacy and for the provision of security to the wife within court premises.
Inquiry into Perjury: The Family Court was directed to inquire into the initiation of proceedings against the husband for filing false affidavits and concealing material facts.
Recovery Mechanism: If the cost is not paid, the District Magistrate is authorized to recover it as arrears of land revenue and ensure no third-party interest is created in the husband's properties.
Sources:
Thursday, April 23, 2026
Science Over Status: SC Rules No Maintenance for Non-Biological Children
Foreign Judgment Passed Without Fair Opportunity To Defend Not Enforceable In India: Supreme Court
Sunday, April 19, 2026
Rahul Gandhi British Nationality case
Friday, April 17, 2026
Rahul Gandhi:Lucknow Bench of the Allahabad High Court,Justice Subhash Vidyarthi observed that the allegations were serious enough to warrant a formal probe
On April 17, 2026, the Lucknow Bench of the Allahabad High Court ordered the registration of a First Information Report (FIR) against Rahul Gandhi regarding allegations of dual citizenship. The court directed the Kotwali police station in Rae Bareli to file the FIR and initiate a detailed investigation.
Key Details of the High Court Order
Court Observation: Justice Subhash Vidyarthi observed that the allegations were serious enough to warrant a formal probe.
Investigating Agency: The court suggested the Uttar Pradesh government could conduct the probe itself or refer it to a central agency, such as the CBI.
Grounds for FIR: The petitioner alleged violations under the Bharatiya Nyaya Sanhita (BNS), the Passport Act, the Foreigners Act, and the Official Secrets Act.
The Petitioner: The case was brought by S. Vignesh Shishir, a BJP worker from Karnataka.
Background of the Case
Earlier Rejection: The High Court's decision sets aside a January 28, 2026, order from a special MP/MLA court in Lucknow, which had previously dismissed the plea citing a lack of jurisdiction over citizenship matters.
Specific Allegations: The petitioner claimed to have documents and "confidential emails" from the UK government indicating that Rahul Gandhi declared his nationality as British in filings for a UK-based company, Backops Ltd, between 2003 and 2009.
Delhi High Court Status: Separately, the Delhi High Court recently allowed a plea by Dr. Subramanian Swamy on the same issue to be heard by a roster bench.
Comparative Analysis of Key Amendments to the Negotiable Instruments Act, with Focus on Section 138
The Negotiable Instruments Act, 1881 (NI Act) originally dealt with promissory notes, bills of exchange, and cheques as instruments facilitating commerce. Chapter XVII, containing Section 138 (offence of dishonour of cheque for insufficiency of funds or exceeding arranged amount), was inserted by the Banking, Public Financial Institutions and Negotiable Instruments Laws (Amendment) Act, 1988 (effective 1 April 1989). This transformed cheque dishonour from a purely civil wrong into a quasi-criminal offence, punishable with imprisonment up to two years (enhanced later), fine up to twice the cheque amount, or both. The core objective was to enhance the credibility and acceptability of cheques in commercial transactions. 
Subsequent amendments refined procedural aspects, addressed judicial inconsistencies, expedited trials, and provided interim relief to complainants while balancing the interests of drawers. No major substantive overhaul of Section 138 has occurred post-2002, though procedural safeguards and recent judicial interpretations (2025–2026) continue to shape its application. Below is a structured comparison of the principal amendments impacting Section 138 jurisprudence.
1. 1988 Amendment (Introduction of Chapter XVII)
• Key Changes:
• Inserted Sections 138–142, criminalising cheque dishonour when presented within its validity period (then six months), followed by a written demand notice (initially within 15 days of dishonour information), and non-payment within 15 days of notice receipt.
• Punishment: Imprisonment up to 1 year, fine up to twice the cheque amount, or both.
• Cognizance limited under Section 142 (complaint by payee/holder in due course within one month of cause of action).
• Impact on Section 138: Created the foundational offence. Pre-1988, dishonour attracted only civil remedies. The provision is cheque-centric, with rebuttable presumptions under Sections 118 and 139.
• Limitations Exposed: Prolonged trials, jurisdictional forum-shopping, and lack of summary procedure led to massive pendency.
2. 2002 Amendment (Negotiable Instruments (Amendment and Miscellaneous Provisions) Act, 2002)
• Key Changes:
• Enhanced punishment under Section 138: Imprisonment up to two years (from one year).
• Extended notice period under proviso (b) to Section 138: Payee must demand payment within 30 days (from 15 days) of receiving dishonour information.
• Introduced summary trial mechanism (Section 143): Offences to be tried summarily per CrPC Sections 262–265; Magistrate may convert to regular trial with recorded reasons. Aim: Disposal within six months.
• Inserted Sections 144 (mode of service of summons), 145 (evidence on affidavit), 146 (banker’s slip as prima facie evidence), and 147 (offence compoundable).
• Amended Section 141 (liability of companies/directors) and Section 142 (cognizance).
• Impact: Shifted focus toward speedy, compensatory justice rather than pure punishment. Made proceedings more efficient and encouraged compounding (guided later by Damodar S. Prabhu v. Sayed Babalal H., 2010). Presumptions strengthened; burden shifted to accused to rebut. 
• Comparison with 1988: Substantially procedural strengthening; increased deterrent effect via higher punishment and faster trials.
3. 2015 Amendment (Negotiable Instruments (Amendment) Act, 2015 – Retrospective from 15 June 2015)
• Key Changes (Inserted via Ordinance, later Act):
• Amended Section 142: Added sub-section (2) clarifying territorial jurisdiction exclusively.
• For account-payee cheques (delivered for collection through account): Court where payee’s home branch (branch where payee maintains account) is situated.
• For other cheques: Court where drawee bank branch (drawer’s account) is situated.
• Explanation: Delivery to any branch of payee’s bank deemed delivery to home branch.
• Inserted Section 142A: Validation for transfer of pending cases; centralisation of multiple complaints against same drawer in one court (first-filed compliant court).
• Minor update to Section 6 (definition of “cheque in electronic form”) aligning with IT Act, 2000.
• Impact: Overruled conflicting Supreme Court views (K. Bhaskaran allowing multiple forums vs. Dashrath Rupsingh Rathod restricting to place of dishonour). Prevented forum-shopping and harassment of drawers. Recent Supreme Court in Jai Balaji Industries Ltd. v. HEG Ltd. (2025) reaffirmed payee’s home branch jurisdiction for account-payee cheques, treating the 2015 amendment as special law prevailing over CrPC. 
• Comparison: Purely jurisdictional reform addressing practical banking realities (multi-branch operations). Retrospective effect validated transfers and reduced multiplicity.
4. 2018 Amendment (Negotiable Instruments (Amendment) Act, 2018 – Effective 1 September 2018)
• Key Changes:
• Inserted Section 143A: Court may direct drawer to pay interim compensation (up to 20% of cheque amount) to complainant:
• In summary/summons cases: After accused pleads not guilty.
• In other cases: Upon framing of charge.
• Recoverable as arrears of land revenue. (Prospective only – applies to offences post-2018; G.J. Raja v. Tejraj Surana, 2019).
• Inserted Section 148: In appeal against conviction under Section 138, appellate court may order appellant (drawer) to deposit minimum 20% of fine/compensation awarded by trial court (in addition to any interim compensation under 143A). Generally treated as rule unless special reasons recorded. (Retrospective for pending appeals; Surinder Singh Deswal v. Virender Gandhi, 2019).
• Impact: Provided immediate financial relief to complainants during pendency, discouraging frivolous defences and appeals. Balanced punitive and compensatory nature of Section 138. Courts have clarified discretion under 143A (directory, not mandatory – Rakesh Ranjan Shrivastava v. State of Jharkhand, 2024).
• Comparison with Prior Amendments: Introduced compensatory mechanism during litigation, addressing delays. Unlike 2002 (trial speed) or 2015 (jurisdiction), this directly mitigates economic hardship to payees.
Recent Developments and Proposed/Claimed 2025 Changes
No comprehensive central amendment to the NI Act in 2025–early 2026 has been enacted that fundamentally alters Section 138. Some sources mention extended complaint filing timelines (one to three months) or enhanced penalties effective April 2025, but these appear unsubstantiated or limited to procedural tweaks in specific contexts. Judicial guidelines (e.g., Sanjabij Tari v. Kishore S. Borcar, 2025) emphasise dasti/electronic summons, online payment portals, graded compounding costs, and strict enforcement of presumptions, building on existing amendments without legislative overhaul. Decriminalisation proposals (2020) did not materialise.
Overall Evolution and Comparative Impact
• 1988: Introduced penal deterrent → foundational.
• 2002: Procedural efficiency + compounding → reduced backlog potential.
• 2015: Jurisdictional clarity + centralisation → prevented abuse and uncertainty.
• 2018: Interim relief in trial & appeal → stronger complainant protection and deterrence against delays.
The amendments progressively tilt Section 138 from a strict penal provision toward a hybrid compensatory-regulatory offence, aligning with modern banking and digital transactions (e.g., electronic cheques). Pendency remains high, but Supreme Court interventions (summary trials, presumptions, multiple complaints maintainable for distinct cheques) reinforce legislative intent.
Conclusion: The 2015 and 2018 amendments represent the most significant procedural refinements since 2002, providing certainty in jurisdiction and interim remedies. Practitioners must ensure strict compliance with notice requirements, jurisdictional rules (payee’s home branch for account-payee cheques), and utilise compounding/settlement mechanisms early. As digital payments evolve, further legislative fine-tuning may be expected, but the core cheque-centric framework under Section 138 endures.
Wednesday, April 15, 2026
High Courts Cannot Quash Magistrate’s 156(3) CrPC Investigation Order by Examining Accused’s Defences or Holding Mini-Trial-SC
High Courts Cannot Quash Magistrate’s Order for Police Investigation Under Section 156(3) CrPC by Examining Accused’s Defences or Conducting Mini-Trial at Pre-Investigation Stage
Section 156(3) of the Code of Criminal Procedure, 1973 (CrPC) is a key procedural provision that empowers a Magistrate to direct the police to investigate a cognizable offence.
Full Text of Section 156(3) CrPC
“Any Magistrate empowered under section 190 may order such an investigation as above mentioned.”
(This refers to the police powers of investigation outlined in Section 156(1) and (2) for cognizable cases.)
Simple Explanation
• Police powers without Magistrate’s order: Under Section 156(1), police officers can investigate cognizable offences (serious crimes like theft, cheating, forgery, criminal breach of trust, etc.) on their own, without needing prior permission from a court. They register an FIR under Section 154 and proceed.
• When police refuse or fail: If the police station refuses to register an FIR (e.g., due to influence, delay, or denial), the aggrieved person can approach a higher police officer under Section 154(3). If that also fails, they can file a private complaint/application before a Magistrate.
• Magistrate’s role under 156(3): A Judicial Magistrate (who is empowered to take cognizance under Section 190 CrPC) can order the police to register an FIR and conduct a full investigation if the complaint prima facie (on the face of it) discloses the commission of a cognizable offence.
This order is passed at the pre-cognizance stage — meaning the Magistrate has not yet taken formal cognizance of the offence or examined witnesses under Section 200. The Magistrate simply applies judicial mind to check whether the allegations in the complaint, if taken at face value, make out ingredients of a cognizable crime. No detailed evidence evaluation or mini-trial is required at this stage.
Once the Magistrate passes the order:
• Police must register the FIR.
• They conduct investigation as per Chapter XII CrPC.
• They file a final report (charge sheet or final report) under Section 173.
Sunday, April 12, 2026
Withdrawal of Justice Yashwant Varma from Inquiry Proceedings
1. Overview
Justice Yashwant Varma, a Judge of the Allahabad High Court, has officially withdrawn from the proceedings of the Judges Inquiry Committee and submitted his resignation to the President of India. This decision follows a protracted inquiry into allegations concerning the recovery of cash from his official residence.
2. Background of the Inquiry
- Triggering Incident: The recovery of cash from a storeroom at Justice Varma's official residence following a fire in March 2025.
- Impeachment Motion: Over 100 Lok Sabha MPs moved a motion for his impeachment, leading the Lok Sabha Speaker to constitute a three-member committee under the Judges Inquiry Act, 1968.
- Committee Composition:
- Justice Aravind Kumar (Supreme Court of India)
- Justice Shree Chandrashekhar (Chief Justice, Bombay High Court)
- Senior Advocate BV Acharya
- Legal Challenge: Justice Varma previously challenged the constitution of this committee before the Supreme Court, though the challenge was unsuccessful.
3. Key Arguments for Withdrawal
In a 13-page communication to the Committee, Justice Varma cited several reasons for his withdrawal, characterizing the process as "unfair":
A. Reversal of Burden of Proof
Justice Varma contended that the inquiry shifted the burden of proof onto him, requiring him to disprove allegations regarding cash that had never been evidentiary linked to him.
B. Procedural Irregularities
- Witness Handling: He alleged that 27 out of 54 witnesses—including officials from Delhi Police and Delhi Fire Services—were dropped without explanation after their testimony reportedly contradicted the prosecution's narrative.
- Lack of Evidence: He argued the proceedings relied on presumptions rather than concrete evidence.
C. Context of the Incident
Justice Varma maintained that the fire occurred while he and his spouse were in a remote location with limited connectivity during the Holi break. He asserted he was unaware of the cash until well after the fire was controlled.
4. Resignation and Conclusion
Parallel to his withdrawal, Justice Varma has resigned from his post as a Judge of the Allahabad High Court. He concluded his communication by stating that continuing with the inquiry would be a "disservice" to himself and the judiciary, expressing hope that posterity would judge the fairness of how a sitting High Court judge was treated.
5. Timeline of Events
|
Date |
Event |
|
March 2025 |
Fire at official residence; alleged discovery of cash. |
|
2025 |
Impeachment motion moved by 100+ MPs; Committee formed. |
|
2025 |
Supreme Court dismisses challenge to Committee's constitution. |
|
April 2026 |
Justice Varma resigns and withdraws from inquiry. |





