Homebuyers’ Right to Peaceful Protest Upheld
The Court concluded that the buyers stayed within legal limits. Their protest was peaceful and constitutionally protected.
Res Judicata Apply to Criminal Trials Decided on Merits
It ruled that factual findings in one case bind the parties in any subsequent proceedings involving the same issue.
Possession of Substances in the NDPS Act Schedule , an Offence, Even if Not in the NDPS Rules
clarified that the mere absence of a substance from the Rules does not remove it from the NDPS Act’s purview.
Non-Service of Section 21 Notice Not a Bar to Being Made Party in Arbitration
The key factor, the Court observed, is whether the person sought to be impleaded is a party to the arbitration agreement, either expressly or by conduct.
Are Summaries of copyrighted books infringe the rights of the copyright holder?
The issue of whether audio summaries infringe the exclusive rights of a copyright owner is an integral question that arose in the case of Pocket FM v/s Kuku FM where Kuku FM provides audio book summary of books which copyrights are owned by
Delhi High Court Orders Removal of ‘Captain Blue’ Trademark for Deceptive Similarity with Diageo’s ‘Captain Morgan’
Delhi HC directs removal of 'Captain Blue' mark from registry, citing deceptive similarity with Diageo's 'Captain Morgan' brand.
Suit Can Be Dismissed as Time-Barred Even Without Framing Limitation Issue
the Court emphasized that the court must reject any suit, appeal, or application filed beyond the prescribed time limit, even if the defendant hasn't raised the issue
SC To FSSAI Expert Panel, Submit Report on Food Star Rating Labels
submit its report within three months regarding proposed amendments introducing a star-rating system on food packaging based on nutritional value.
SC: SEBI Can’t Issue Fresh Orders on Same Cause Once Final Order Passed
The Supreme Court has ruled that SEBI cannot pass a second order demanding disgorgement (repayment of unlawful gains) after issuing a final order without including such a direction in the same case
SC: Government Sanction Must for Prosecuting Police Officers Acting Under Official Duty
The Supreme Court has reaffirmed that police officers cannot be prosecuted for actions taken during official duties—even if they overstep their authority