LLB First Sem Syllabus Word
LLB First Sem Syllabus Word
2. Collective Bargaining
government contracts – their usual clauses – performance of such contracts – settlements of disputes and
4. Nature, advantages – unilateral character, principles of protection against the possibility of exploitation
– judicial approach to such contracts – exemption clauses – clash between two standard form contracts.
Multi-national Agreement
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TORTS AND CONSUMER PROTECTION LAWS
(Tort- 70marks, Consumer Protection Law- 30marks)
Negligence
- Basic concepts
- Theories of negligence
- Standards of care, duty to take care, carelessness, inadvertence - Doctrine of contributory negligence
- Res ipsa loquitur and its importance in contemporary law
- Liability due to negligence: different professional
- Liability of common carrier for negligence
- Product liability due to negligence: liability of manufacturers and business houses for their products
Nuisance
- Definition, essentials and types
- Acts which constitute nuisance – obstructions of highways, pollution of air, water, noise, and interference with light and air.
Legal remedies
- Legal remedies:
- Award of damages – simple, special, punitive
- Remoteness of damage – foresee ability and directness
- Injunction
- Specific restitution of property
- Extra-legal remedies – self-help, re-entry on land, re-caption of goods, distress damage feasant and abetment of nuisance.
Consumer of goods
- Meaning of defects in goods
- Standards of purity, quality, quantity and potency
- Statutes: food and drugs, engineering and electrical goods
Consumer Safety
- Starting, distribution and handling of unsafe and hazardous products - Insecticides and pesticides and other poisonous substances
Service
- Deficiency – meaning - Professional services
- Medical services
- How to determine negligence
- Violation of statute
- Denial of medical service: violation of human rights
- Lawyering services: duty-towards-court and duty-to-client dilemma, break of confidentiality – negligence and misconduct.
- Public Utilities
- Supply of electricity
- Telecommunication and postal services
- Housing
- Banking
Commercial services
- Hiring
- Financing
- Agency Services
AUDIALTERAM PARTEM
No man shall be condemned unheard
NOSCITUR A SOCILS
The meaning of doubtful word may be ascertained by reference to the meaning of words associated with it
CAVEAT EMPTOR
Let purchaser beware
RESPONDEAT SUPERIOR
Let the principal be held responsible
Law – Custom – Justice – Right – Duty –Wrong - Civil Wrong - Criminal Wrong Remedy -
Fact-Person – Offence – Person – State – Plaint – Complaint – Suit -Affidavit Judgment – Appeal – Review –Revision – Reference – Writ - Stay order -
Injunction Adjournment Cause of Action – Issue – Charge - Bail Ex Parte – Discharge – Accquital – Conviction - Legal heirs - Legal Representative - Power
of Attomey - International Law – Arbitration – Jurisdiction - Amicus Curiae.
Brief introduction to the various parts of an Act – Intent (aims & objects) short title – Long title – Date of Assent – Section Subsection – marginal note – date of
commencement – schedule or Table.
Exposure to Current Indian Statutes – AIR Manual Civil Court Manual – Criminal Court Manual – Maharashtra Local Acts – Gazette of India – Maharashtra State Gazette.
Exposure to official Reports and Private Reports – Supreme Court Reports – Indian Law Reports – All India Reporter – All India High Court cases –Judgement Today
Bombay Law Reporter – Bombay cases Reporter – Maharashtra Law Journal, Supreme Court cases – Criminal Law Journal – Labour & Industrial cases – Company cases –
Madras Law Journal – All Maharashtra Law Reporter Marriage & Divorce cases – Consumer. All England Law Reporter.
Exposure to Lawyers collective insight – One India One People – Journal of the Indian Law Institute – India Bar Review – The Indian Advocate, Journal of
the Bar Council of India – India Quarterly – Modern Law Review – Law Quarterly Review.
First Year (Three Years) (Sem. II) LL.B. degree course LAW OF CRIMES
A. CRIMINAL JURISPRUDENCE
1. Administration of Justice
- What is administration of justice
- Necessity for administration of justice
- Historical background to administration of justice
- Difference between civil and criminal justice
3. Stages of Crime
- Intention
- Preparation
- Attempt
- Commission of Crime
4. Theories of Punishment
- Deterrent
- Preventive
- Retributive
- Reformative
- Compensation
5. Kinds of Punishment
- Death Sentence
- Social Reference of Capital Punishment
- Alternative to Capital Punishment
- Imprisonment
- Simple
- Rigorous
- For Life
- Solitary Confinement
- Forfeiture of Property
- Fine
- Sentencing Discretion
CONSTITUTIONAL LAW
4. Indian Federalism – idea of federalism – Indian federal features – strong centre – co-operative spirit– centre relations - Special status to J & K
(Parts XI, XII, XIII, XIV, XXI)
5. Indian Parliament – Nature, Composition, powers and privileges and state legislatures.
7. Indian Judiciary: Supreme Court and High Courts, composition, powers and Judicial Independence – subordinate courts
FAMILY LAW – I
ENVIRONMENTAL LAWS
1) Concept of environment and pollution or introduction to problem of Environmental protection.
(i) Environment
(ii) Meaning and contents
(iii) Pollution
(iv) Meaning
(v) Kinds of Pollution
(vi) Causes of pollution
(vii) Effects of pollution
2) Constitutional provisions regarding environmental protection including
(i) Directive principles
(ii) Fundamental rights and duties
(iii) Right to clean and healthy environment
(iv) Right to education
(v) Right to information
(vi)
3) Environmental protection under the general Laws: Nuisance, Penal Code, Procedural Code
6) Precautionary Principle
7) Sustainable development
9) Noise Pollution
10) Environmental Protection Act 1986
11) Bio Medical waste
12) Hazardous waste
13) Environment impact assessment
14) Coastal zone management
15) Environmental audit and eco mark
16) Disaster emergency preparedness
17) Town and country planning
18) Forest
(i) Greenery conservation laws
(ii) Forest conservation
(iii) Conservation agencies
19) Wild life Protection Act 1972
(i) Sanctuaries and national parks
(ii) Licensing of zoos and parks
(iii) State monopoly in the sale of wild life and wild life
(iv) Offences against wild life
20) International Regime
(i) Stockholm conference
(ii) Green house effect and ozone depletion
(iii) Rio conference
(iv) U.N. declaration on right to development
Practical Training – I
(i) Professional Ethics (ii) Advocacy for Lawyers (iii) Bar Bench relations.
(iv) The Contempt Law and Practice
(v) Selected opinions of the Disciplinary Committee of Bar Councils and Major Judgement of the Supreme Court on the subject.
Second Year (3 Year) (Sem. III) LL.B. degree course
ADMINISTRATIVE LAW
4.7 Rule of evidence – no evidence, some evidence and substantial evidence rules.
4.8 Reasoned decisions.
4.9 The right to counsel.
4.10 Institutional decisions
4.11 Administrative appeals
6. Administrative discretion
6.1. Need for administrative discretion
6.2. Administrative discretion and rule of law
6.3 . Limitations on exercise of discretion
6.3.1. Malafide exercise of discretion
6.3.2. Constitutional imperative and use of discretionary authority
6.3.3. Irrelevant considerations
6.3.4. Non-exercise of discretionary power
FAMILY LAW - II
4. Joint Family
4.1. Mitakshara joint family
4.2. Mitakshara coparcenary-formation and incidents
4.3. Property under Mitakshara law-separate property and corparcenary property. 4.4. Dayabhaga coparcenary-formation and incidents
4.5. Property under Dayabhaga law.
4.6. Karta of the joint family-his position, powers, privileges and obligations.
4.7. Alienation of property-separate and coparcenary 4.8. Debta-doctrines of pious obligations and antecedent debt.
4.9. Partitition and re-union.
4.10. Joint Hindu family as a social security institution and impact of Hindu Gains of Learning Act and various tax laws on it.
4.11. Matrilineal joint family.
5. Inheritance
5.1. Hindus
5.1.1. Historical perspective of traditional Hindu law as a background to the study of Hindu succession Act 1956.
5.1.2 Succession to property of a Hindu male dying intestate under the provisions of Hindu Succession Act 1956.
5.1.3 Devolution of interest in Mitakshara coparcenary with reference to the provisions of Hindu Succession Act 1956.
5.1.4 Succession to property of Hindu female dying intestate under the Hindu Succession Act 1956.
5.1.5 Disqualification relating to succession
5.1.6 General rules of succession
5.1.7 Marumakkattayam and Aliyasantana laws governing people living in Thiruvanadapuram, Cochin and other districts of Malabar and South Kanara.
5.2. General rules of succession and exclusion from succession.
5.2.1 Classification of heirs under Hanafi and Ithna Ashria schools and their shares and distribution of property.”
5.3. Christians, Parsis and Jews
6. Matrimonial Remedies
6.1. Non-judicial resolution of marital conflicts.
a. Customary dissolution of marriage-unilateral divorce, divorce by mutual consent and other modes of dissolution,
6.2 Judicial resolution of martial conflicts: the family court
6.3 Nullity of marriage
6.4 Option of puberty – Condition of Valid Marriage – Section 5 of Hindu Marriage Act wherein conditions of valid marriage are given.
6.5 Restitution of conjugal rights
6.6 Judicial separation
6.7 Desertion a ground for matrimonial relief
6.8 Cruelty: a ground for matrimonial relief
6.9 Adultery: a ground for matrimonial relief 6.10 Other grounds for matrimonial relief
6.11 Bar to matrimonial relief:
6.11.1. Doctrine of strict proof
6.11.2. Taking advantage of one’s own wrong or disability
6.11.3. Accessory
6.11.4. Connivance
6.11.5. Collusion
6.11.6. Condonation
6.11.7. Improper or unnecessary delay
6.11.8. Residuary clause-no other legal ground exists for refusing the matrimonial relief.
Syllabus
1. Jurisprudential Controls of Property
1.1. Concept and meaning of property.
1.2. Kinds of property – movable and immovable property – tangible and intangible property – intellectual property – copyright-patents and designs-
trademarks– geographical indications.
3. Easement Act.
4.1. Nature, characteristics and extinction
4.2. Creation of easements
4.3. Riparian rights
4.4. Licenses
COMPANY LAW
1. Meaning of Corporation
1.1 Theories of corporate personal
1.2 Creation and extinction of corporations.
3.8 Debentures – meaning – fixed and floating charge-kinds of debentures- share-holder and debenture holder- remedies of debenture holders
3.10 Prevention of oppression and mismanagement - who can apply ? – Powers of the company, the court and the central government
4.2 National law FEMA (Foreign Exchange Management Act, 1999) controls joint – ventures – investment of India – repatriation of project.
4.3 Collaboration agreements for technology transfer.
5. Corporate Liability
Latest Editions of Books
5.1 Legal liability of companies – civil and criminal
1. Introduction
1.1 Meaning of the term jurisprudence
1.2 Norma and the normative system
1.2.1. Different types of nominee system such as of games, languages, religious orders, unions, clubs and customary practice.
1.2.2 Legal system as a normative order similarities and differences of the legal system with order normative system.
1.3. Nature and definition of law
2. Schools of Jurisprudence
2.1 Analytical positivism
2.2 Natural law
2.3 Historical school
2.4 Sociological school
2.5 Economic interpretation of law
2.6 The Modern PIL, social justice, compensatory jurisprudence
2.7 The Bharat jurisprudence
2.8 The Ancient : the concept of ‘Dharma’
3. Purpose of Law
3.1 Justice
3.1.1 Meaning and kinds
3.1.2 Justice and law approaches of different schools
3.1.3 Power of the Supreme Court of India to do complete justice in a case. Article 147.
3.1.4 Critical studies
3.1.5 Feminist jurisprudence
4. Sources of Law
4.1. Legislation
4.2 Precedents: concept of state decosos
4.3 Customs
4.4 juristic writings
6. Persons
6.1 Nature of personality
6.2 Status of the unborn, minor, lunatic drunk and deal persons
6.3 Corporate personality
6.4 Dimensions of the modern legal personality Legal personality of non- human beings.
CONTRACT - II
LAND LAWS
(Central Legislation on Land Laws will be allocated 20 Marks, whereas State Legislation allocated 80 marks.).
2. ULC Act
(i) Definitions
(ii) Ceiling Limit – S/4,
(iii) Power to Exempt & Schemes – S/20 to 22
Land Acquisition Act
(i) Definitions
(ii) Acquisition – S/4 to 17.
(iii) Reference to Court – S/18 to 28 A.
(i) Use of Land – S/41 to 54A, (ii) Record of Rights S/147 to 167.
(iii) Appeals, Revision & Review – S/246 – 259,
(iv) Special Provisions for Land Revenue in the City of Bombay – S/260 to
307.
Bombay Tenancy & Agricultural Lands Act, 1948
(i) Definitions
(ii) Restriction on Transfer of Agricultural Lands – S/63 to 66.
(ii) Definitions
(iii) Repairs & Reconstruction of Dilapidated buildings – S/74 to 103. (iv) Acquisition of Cessed Properties – Chapter VIII A
Optional Papers
Criminology and Correctional Administration
5. Victimology
7. Re-socialisation processes
7.1 Parole
7.1.1 Nature of parole
7.1.2. Authority for granting parole
7.1.3. Supervision of parolees
7.1.4. Parole and conditional release
7.2 Release of the offender
7.2.1 Problems of the released offender
7.2.2 Attitudes of the community towards released offender
7.2.3. Prisoner and societies and other voluntary organizations
7.2.4 Governmental action
7.2.5 An appraisal
2. TAXATION LAW
1. Principles of Taxation, Direct taxes & Indirect Taxes and constitutional powers to levy tax
Articles 265-289 and Articles 246A (10 Marks) 2. Income Tax Act, 1961
(40 Marks)
3. Goods & Services Tax Council (Article 279A)
3. BANKRUPTCY LAWS
1. Introductory
1.1. The concept: inability to pay debt
1.2. Comparative perspectives
1.2.1. England: Insolvency Act, Bankruptcy Act
1.2.2. United States of America
1.1. India: concurrent jurisdiction the central and state legislation.
2. Insolvency jurisdiction
2.1. Courts
2.2. Powers of court
3. Acts of Insolvency
4. Insolvency petition
4.1. By creditor
4.2. By debtor
4.3. Contents of the petition
4.4. Admission
4.5. Procedure
5. Appointment of interim receiver 6. Interim proceedings against the debtor 7. Duties of Debtors 8. Release of debtor
9. Procedure at hearing 10. Dismissal of petition filed by a creditor 11. Order of adjudication
11.1 Effect
11.2 Publication of order
12. Proceedings, consequent on order of adjudication
14. Post adjudicatory scheme for satisfaction of the debt 15. Discharge of debtor 16. Effect of insolvency on antecedent transaction
19. Offences by debtors 20. Disqualification of insolvent 21. Appeal 22. Indigent persons
22.1 Suit by indigent persons
INTERPRETATION OF STATUTES
I. 1) Meaning of the term statute.
2) Commencement, operation and repeal of statutes. 3) Purpose of interpretation of statutes.
External Aids:
1) Dictionaries
2) Translations
3) R Travaux preparation
4) Statutes in para
5) Contempronea expositus
6) Debates, inquiry commission reports and law commission reports.
VI. Interpretation with reference to the subject matter and the purpose.
1) Restrictive and beneficial construction.
2) Taxing structures.
3) Penal statutes.
4) Welfare legislation.
5) Interpretation of directory and mandatory provisions 6) Interpretation of substantive and adjunctival statutes.
7) Interpretation of enabling statutes.
8) Interpretation of statutes conferring rights
9) Interpretation of statutes conferring powers.
Human Rights:
National view on the basis of the Indian constitution and judicial expositions.
Human Rights and Child Abuse
Human Rights and Women
Human Rights and Workers
Human Rights and accused Convicts and Prisoners.
Human Rights and Environment
Impact and implementation of international human rights norms in India. Human rights norms reflected in fundamental rights in the
constitution. Directive principles, Legislative and administrative implementation of International human rights.
Implementation of human rights norms through judicial process.
- Distinctions
- 1940 law and 1996 law: UNICITRAL model law
- Arbitration and Conciliation
- Arbitration and expert determination
- Extent of judicial intervention
- International commercial arbitration
Arbitration agreement
- Essentials
- Kinds
- Who can enter into arbitration agreement
- Validity
- Reference to arbitration
- Interim measures by court
Arbitration Tribunal
- Appointment
- Challenge
- Jurisdiction of arbitral tribunal
- Powers
- Grounds of challenge
- Procedure
- Court assistance
Award
- Rules of guidance
- Form and content
- Correction and interpretation
- Grounds of setting aside an award - Can misconduct be a ground?
- Incapacity of a party, invalidity of arbitration agreement
- Want of proper notice and hearing
- Beyond the scope of reference
- Contravention of composition and procedure
- Breach of confidentiality
- Impartiality of the arbitrator
- Bar of limitation, res judicata
- Consent of parties
- Enforcement
Appeal and revision
Conciliation
- Distinction between ‘Conciliation’, ‘Negotiation’, ‘mediation’ and ‘arbitration’
- Appointment
- Statements to conciliator
- Interaction between conciliator and parties
- Communication
- Duty of parties to cooperate
- Suggestions by parties
- Confidentiality
- Resort to judicial proceedings
- Costs
Rule-making power
- High Court
- Central Government
- Legal Service Authorities Act; Scope
Lok Adalats
LAW OF EVIDENCE
Indian Evidence Act 1872
Optional papers
2) LAW OF INSURANCE
Introduction
- Definition, nature and history of insurance
- Concept of Insurance and law of contract and law of torts; future of insurance in globalized economy
- History and development of insurance in India
- Insurance Regulatory Authority – role and functions
- Contract of insurance – classification of contract of insurance, nature of various insurance contracts, parties thereto
- Principle of good faith-non-disclosure-misrepresentation in insurance contract
- Insurable interest
- The risk
- The policy – classification of policies-its form and contents, its commencement, duration, cancellation, alteration, rectification, renewal, assignment,
construction
- Conditions of the policy
- Alteration of the risk
-
Assignment of the subject matter
Life Insurance
- Nature and scope of life insurance, definition, kinds of life insurance, the policy and
formation of a life insurance contract
- Event insured against life insurance contract
- Circumstances affecting the risk
- Amounts recoverable under life policy
- Persons entitled to payment
- Settlement of claim and payment of money
Marine Insurance
- Nature and scope
- Classification of marine policies
- The Marine Insurance Act 1963
- Insurable interest, insurable value
- Marine insurance policy – conditions – express warranties construction of terms of policy
- Voyage – deviation
- Perils of the sea
- Partial loss of ship and of freight, salvage general average, particular charges -
Measure of indemnity, total valuation, liability to third parties
Fire insurance
- The scheme
- Authorities
4) CONFLICT OF LAWS
Introductory
- What and why of conflict of laws: its function, bases like comity, convenience and justice
- Difference between Public and Private International law
- Development and history- England and India – a comparative sketch with reference to USA
and other countries - Modern theories:
Statutory, territorial, international, local law and justice
- Stage in a Private International law case
- Choice of Jurisdiction
- Choice of law (lex cause)
- Recognition and enforcement of foreign judgments / awards
- When foreign law is excluded: grounds – Public Policy, Revenue Laws and Penal Law
Concept of Domicile
Status
- What is Status?
- Incidents
- What law governs status
- Universality of status
Marriage
- Marriage as a contract and also status how different from other contracts (social personal
contract)
- Kinds of Marriage
- How in India, marriage as a concept moved from partially polygamous towards
monogamous type and total sacrament to secularization to some extent
- Questions of format and essential validity
- Formal validity by lex loci celebrations
- Essential / material / intrinsic validity
- Capacity to marriage
- Consent
- Not within prohibited degrees
- Not previously married
- Physical incapacity
- Of proper age
- Essential validity usually governed by lex domicili
- English cases
- Indian position clarified in cases
Matrimonial Causes
Adoption
- Purpose of adoption
- Common law
- Indian law
- Hindu law
- Recognition of foreign adoption
Contracts
- Contract – a leading relationship in private international law system
- Validity of contracts
- Capacity to contract – Main four theories Lex Loci, Lex Domicilii, Lex situs and proper
law
- Formal validity – lex loci contractus governs
- Essential validity – proper law is usually accepted as governing - Discharge of
contract – Lex loci solutions governing
- Doctrine of “proper law” of contract subjective and objective Theories
Torts
- Traditional theories
- Ideas of tort of recent importance in private International Law such as drugs,
environments, transport and satellite communication
- specify conventions
Women in India
-
- Pre-Independence period
- Social and legal inequality
- Social Reform Movement in India
- Karachi Congress – Fundamental Rights Resolution, Equality of Sexes
Guardianship
- Right of women to adopt a child
- Problems of women guardianing
Divorce
- Indian Divorce Act
- Christian Law
- Muslim Law
-
Criminal Law
- Adultery
- Rape
Social Legislation
- Laws relating to Dowry, A moral traffic, Female Foeticide, Sati, A moral representation
etc.
b) Pleading:
1. Civil : i) Plaint, ii) Written statement, iii) Interlocutory Application, iv)
Original Petition, v) Affidavit, vi) Execution Petition and vii)
Memorandum of Appeal and Revision, viii) Petition under Article 226 and
32 of the Constitution of India.
PRACTICAL TRAINING - IV
This paper will have three components of 30 marks each and a viva of 10 marks.
a) Moot Court (30 marks)
Every student will do at least three moot court in a year with 10 marks for each the moot
court work will be on assigned problems and it will be evaluated for 5 marks for written
submission and 5 marks for oral advocacy.
d) The fourth component of this paper will be viva voce examination on all the above three
aspects. This will carry 10 marks.