Ehsan kabir Solicitor | Municipal Law : Law of the land - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Ehsan kabir Solicitor | Municipal Law : Law of the land

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Ehsan kabir Solicitorie explainning here about Municipal Law and Law of the land. As well as assisting individual clients, Ehsan Kabir regularly liaises and consults businesses by providing consultancy, assistance, and advisory services. Contact Ehsan Kabir today regarding any legal concerns you are facing. Ehsan Kabir works effortlessly and tirelessly around the clock to anyone with a legal inquiry. To maintain the high standards of client care Mr. Kabir provides out of hours services as well as Skype consultations and meetings with clients who may be based abroad. – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Ehsan kabir Solicitor | Municipal Law : Law of the land


1
Municipal Law Law of the land
  • Ehsan kabir Solicitor

2
  • Law is a Social Science
  • Grows and develops with the growth and
    development of society
  • New developments in society create new problems
    and law is required to deal with those problems

3
Definitions of Law
  • Austin
  • Law is the command of the Sovereign.
  • It is enforceable by a sanction
  • Roscoe Pound
  • Law is a social institution to satisfy social
    wants
  • Salmond
  • Law is a body of principles recognized and
    applied by the State in the administration of
    justice
  • Moulton
  • Law is the crystallized common sense of the
    community

4
Purpose of Law
  • Maintenance of law and order
  • Enables individuals to have the maximum freedom
    to assert themselves
  • Maximum satisfaction of the needs of the people

5
Object of law
  • Object of law is justice
  • Justice operates at two different levels
  • Distributive justice serves to secure balance
    among the members of a community
  • Corrective justice serves to correct the
    dis-equilibrium created by a wrongful act

6
Kinds of Law
  • International law Law of Nations
  • Public International Law Body of rules
    governing the conduct and relations of States
    with each other
  • Private International Law Rules and principles
    governing cases having foreign element. Applies
    to individuals and not to States

7
  • Municipal Law Law of the land
  • Public Law determines and regulates the
    organisation and functioning of the State and
    determines the relation of the State with its
    subjects
  • Private Law regulates and governs the relation
    of citizens with one another

8
  • Public Law
  • Constitutional Law includes all rules which
    directly or indirectly affect the distribution or
    exercise of Sovereign power of the State
  • Administrative Law determines the organisation,
    powers and duties of administrative authorities
  • Criminal Law defines offences and prescribes
    punishments for them

9
  • Private Law
  • Personal Laws
  • Law of Property
  • Law of obligation
  • General Law Ordinary law of the land
  • Special Law Legal rules which are special and
    exceptional in their nature

10
Kinds of Special Law
  • Local Law Law of a particular locality
  • Foreign Law Law of a foreign country
  • Martial Law Law applicable to soldiers as well
    as civilians in times of war or tumult
  • Military Law applicable to soldiers alone

11
Elements of State
  • State is a people organised for law within a
    definite territory
  • Population No State without people
  • Territory People settling down on some definite
    territory constitute a State
  • Government It is the machinery through which
    the administration of a country is carried on. It
    is outward manifestation of the State
  • Sovereignty It is that which is absolute and
    uncontrolled within its own sphere

12
Functions of the State
  • Primary
  • War and administration of justice (Defence
    against external enemy and maintenance of law and
    order within the country)
  • Secondary
  • Legislation and Taxation (necessary for the
    welfare of the citizens)
  • The relation between State and Law is very close
    and intimate
  • The State manifests itself through law and law
    has its importance because it has the sanction of
    the State

13
Sources of Law
  • Legislation Making of law by the formal and
    express declaration of new rules by some
    authority in the body politic which is recognised
    as adequate for that purpose
  • Precedent - Making of law by the recognition and
    application of new rules by courts themselves in
    the administration of justice
  • Customary Law Constituted by customs which
    fulfil the requirements laid down by law as the
    condition for their recognition as obligatory
    rules of conduct
  • Conventional Law - It is that which is
    constituted by agreement having the force of
    special law inter partes

14
Legislation
  • Means the making of the Law or declaration of
    legal rules by competent authority
  • Supreme legislation proceeds from the Sovereign
    power in the State
  • Subordinate legislation proceeds from any
    authority other than the Sovereign power
  • Control over delegated legislation
  • Parliamentary control
  • Judicial control
  • Public opinion

15
Custom
  • Uniformity of conduct of all persons under like
    circumstances
  • It is observed course of conduct
  • It is a rule which has existed from time
    immemorial and obtained the force of law in a
    particular locality
  • When same thing is done again and again in a
    particular way, it assumes the form of custom

16
Precedent
  • Judicial decision to which authority has been
    attached
  • The reason why a precedent is recognised is that
    a judicial decision is presumed to be correct
  • Under this rule, a principle of law which has
    become settled by a series of decisions is
    generally binding on courts and should be
    followed in similar cases
  • The doctrine has been recognised by the
    Constitution of India
  • Article 141 provides that the law declared by the
    Supreme Court shall be binding on all courts in
    India
  • The Supreme Court is free to depart from its
    previous decisions if valid reasons exist for
    doing so

17
Substantive and Procedural Laws
  • Substantive Laws those which define rights,
    duties and liabilities
  • Substantive Criminal Law is contained in the
    Indian Penal Code and various Special and Local
    laws
  • Substantive Civil Law is contained in Acts like
    Indian Contract Act, Hindu Marriage Act, Transfer
    of Property Act etc.

18
  • Procedural Laws or Adjective Laws those which
    define the pleading and procedure by which
    substantive laws are applied in practice.
  • Criminal Procedure Code
  • Civil Procedure Code and
  • Indian Evidence Act
  • are the examples of Procedural Law

19
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