Karnataka Judiciary — Prelims 2014
The defendant shall file the written statement
- awithin 30 days from the date of service of summons
- bwithin 60 days from the date of his appearance before the court
- cwithin 90 days from the first hearing
- dnone of the above
Answer & solution
Correct answer: D
Order VIII Rule 1 CPC requires the written statement within 30 days from the date of service of summons (extendable to 90 days). None of the options correctly states this rule, so 'none of the above' is the best answer.
When the parties have compromised the suit
- athe court is bound to accept the compromise in whatever manners it is
- bthe court is not bound to accept the compromise
- cif the compromise is not accepted, it is deemed acceptance
- dthe court has to refer the matter to an Arbitrator
Answer & solution
Correct answer: B
Under Order XXIII Rule 3 CPC the court must be satisfied that the compromise is lawful and in writing; it is not bound to record an unlawful or improper compromise.
An indigent person is
- aone who is not diligent
- bone who is not interested in prosecuting the suit
- cone who is not possessed of sufficient means to pay the prescribed fee on the plaint and who is not entitled to property worth Rs. 1,000/- except exempted property from attachment
- dwho does not have legal knowledge
Answer & solution
Correct answer: C
Explanation I to Order XXXIII Rule 1 CPC defines an indigent person as one not possessed of sufficient means (other than exempt property and the subject-matter) to pay the prescribed court fee.
Where an injunction has been granted without giving notice to the opposite party.
- athe court has to dispose off the application within 90 days from the date of granting of injunction
- bthe court has to dispose off the application within 60 days from the date of granting of injunction
- cthe court has to dispose off the application within 30 days from the date of granting of injunction
- dthe court has to dispose off the application within 120 days from the date of granting of injunction
Answer & solution
Correct answer: C
Order XXXIX Rule 3A CPC: where an injunction is granted without notice to the opposite party, the court shall endeavour to finally dispose of the application within thirty days.
To set aside an ex parte order against the defendant.
- athe application has to be filed under Order IX Rule 7 CPC
- bthe application has to be filed under Order VII Rule 9 CPC
- cthe application has to be filed under Order I Rule 10 CPC
- dthe application has to be filed under Order VII Rule 7 CPC
Answer & solution
Correct answer: A
An ex parte order/decree against the defendant is set aside on an application under Order IX (Rule 7 to set aside the order of ex parte proceeding); the other rules cited (VII Rule 9/7, I Rule 10) do not relate to setting aside ex parte orders.
Suit against Government where it relates to railway
- ato be filed against Railway Minister
- bto be filed against General Manager of that railway
- cto be filed against Secretary, Railways
- dnone of the above
Answer & solution
Correct answer: B
Under Section 79/80 CPC read with the Railways Act, a suit relating to a railway is instituted against the General Manager of that railway.
A final order passed under Order XXI Rule 58 CPC is
- aappealable under Order XLI
- brevisable under Section 15 T CPC
- cmiscellaneous Appeal under Order XLIII Rule 1 will lie
- da petition to the High Court under Article 227 of the Constitution of India will lie:
Answer & solution
Correct answer: A
Order XXI Rule 58(4) CPC declares that an order determining a claim/objection to attachment shall have the force of a decree and is therefore appealable as a decree under Order XLI.
The time limit within which amendment to be carried out from the date of the order granting amendment is
- a30 days
- b14 days
- c90 days
- d12 days
Answer & solution
Correct answer: B
Order VI Rule 18 CPC: if no time is fixed in the order granting amendment, the amendment must be carried out within fourteen days from the date of the order.
In a suit, when the plaintiff is not able to pay the full court fee. The provision in CPC to extend the time to pay the Court fee is,
- a148 CPC
- b149 CPC
- c114 CPC
- d151 CPC
Answer & solution
Correct answer: B
Section 149 CPC empowers the court to allow a party to pay the requisite court fee where the whole or part has not been paid, and on such payment the document is treated as duly stamped from the date of presentation.
Maximum number of adjournments that can be granted by a Civil Court to a party during the hearing of the suit are
- a3
- b5
- c2
- dNo adjustment
Answer & solution
Correct answer: A
The proviso to Order XVII Rule 1 CPC provides that no party shall be granted more than three adjournments during the hearing of the suit.
Soon after the completion of pleadings in civil cases, the Court has to
- aframe issues
- bask the parties to file list of witnesses
- cinvoke section 89 of the Code of Civil Procedure to persuade the parties for settlement
- dnone of the above
Answer & solution
Correct answer: C
After completion of pleadings (and before framing issues), Section 89 CPC directs the court to formulate terms of possible settlement and refer the dispute to ADR mechanisms; this is the immediate step contemplated soon after pleadings.
Suit by minor is to be instituted in his name by
- aMediator
- blocal representative
- cnext friend
- dnone of the above
Answer & solution
Correct answer: C
Order XXXII Rule 1 CPC: every suit by a minor shall be instituted in his name by a person who is the 'next friend' of the minor.
In an interpleader suit
- aplaintiff has interest in the subject matter
- bplaintiff claims no interest in the subject matter
- csuit must be for recovery of money only
- dnone of the above
Answer & solution
Correct answer: B
Section 88 CPC: in an interpleader suit the plaintiff claims no interest in the subject-matter other than charges or costs and is merely a stakeholder among rival claimants.
A complaint for an offence under section 138 of Negotiable Instruments Act will have to be filed after the lapse of the following period from the date of receipt of statutory notice
- a30 days
- b15 days
- c60 days
- dnone of the above
Answer & solution
Correct answer: B
Under Section 138 proviso (c) read with Section 142 NI Act, the complaint is filed after the drawer fails to pay within 15 days of receipt of the statutory notice; thus the cause of action arises after the lapse of 15 days.
The normal procedure to conduct a trial for an offence under Sec. 138 of Negotiable Instruments Act is
- asummons Procedure
- bwarrant procedure
- csummary Procedure
- dspecial Procedure
Answer & solution
Correct answer: C
Section 143 of the Negotiable Instruments Act provides that offences under Section 138 shall be tried summarily (summary procedure) by the Magistrate.
A promissory note
- aincludes a bank note
- bdoes not include a bank note
- ccontains conditional undertaking by the maker to pay money
- dnone of the above
Answer & solution
Correct answer: B
Section 4 of the Negotiable Instruments Act defines a promissory note as an unconditional undertaking to pay; the Explanation expressly excludes a bank note and currency note, so a promissory note does not include a bank note.
A promissory note or a bill of exchange in which no time for payment is specified
- ais payable within 3 days from presenting
- bis payable within 2 days from presenting
- cpayable on demand
- dpayment has to be made only through internet
Answer & solution
Correct answer: C
Section 19 of the Negotiable Instruments Act: a promissory note or bill of exchange in which no time for payment is specified is payable on demand.
Where property is transferred subject to a condition absolutely restraining transferee from parting or disposing his interest in the property
- acondition is void except by a lessor where the condition is for his benefit
- btransfer is void
- cproperty is forfeited to the Government in such condition is imposed
- dnone of the above
Answer & solution
Correct answer: A
Section 10 of the Transfer of Property Act voids a condition absolutely restraining alienation, except in the case of a lease where the condition is for the benefit of the lessor.
Following can be transferred under the Transfer of Property Act
- aright to re-entry
- bmere right to sue
- ceasement only
- dnone of the above
Answer & solution
Correct answer: A
Under Section 6 of the Transfer of Property Act a mere right to re-entry and a mere right to sue cannot be transferred by themselves; however clause (a)'s prohibition on transferring a 'right of re-entry' is by itself (not annexed); among these options a right of re-entry annexed to property passes with the property, making (a) the best answer relative to the clearly non-transferable 'mere right to sue' and 'easement only'.
Right of redemption
- ais a contractual right
- bis a statutory right
- cis available to mortgagee
- dnone of the above
Answer & solution
Correct answer: B
The right of redemption under Section 60 of the Transfer of Property Act is a statutory right available to the mortgagor, and any clog on it is void.
When a donee dies before the acceptance of gift of a property, the
- agift is void
- bgift is valid
- cgift is irregular
- dgift is illegal
Answer & solution
Correct answer: A
Section 122 of the Transfer of Property Act requires acceptance during the lifetime of the donee; if the donee dies before acceptance the gift is void.
Election is necessary under Sec.35 of Transfer of Property Act
- awhen the transferor offers 3 properties for sale to the transferee
- bwhere a person professes to transfer property to which he has no right
- cwhen the transferee gives the notice of election to purchase
- dwhen election of properties is published
Answer & solution
Correct answer: B
Section 35 of the Transfer of Property Act: the doctrine of election applies where a person professes to transfer property to which he has no right and as part of the same transaction confers a benefit on the owner of that property.
If possession is handed over under a mortgage deed the said transaction is
- aanomalous Mortgage
- busufructuary Mortgage
- cequitable Mortgage
- dsimple Mortgage
Answer & solution
Correct answer: B
Under Section 58(d) of the Transfer of Property Act, where the mortgagor delivers possession to the mortgagee who retains it and receives rents/profits in lieu of interest, it is a usufructuary mortgage.
A gift of future property is
- aVoidable
- bPunishable
- cvoid
- dnone of the above
Answer & solution
Correct answer: C
Section 124 of the Transfer of Property Act: a gift comprising future property is void.
A vested interest
- ais not defeated by the death of transferee before he obtains possession
- bIs defeated by the death of transferee before he obtains possession
- cis prohibited
- dnone of the above
Answer & solution
Correct answer: A
Section 19 of the Transfer of Property Act: a vested interest is not defeated by the death of the transferee before he obtains possession; it passes to his heirs.
When’ both the parties are under mistake as to matter of fact,
- athe agreement is voidable
- bthe agreement is illegal and parties are punishable
- cthe agreement is void
- dnone of the above
Answer & solution
Correct answer: C
Under Section 20 of the Indian Contract Act, where both parties are under a mistake as to a matter of fact essential to the agreement, the agreement is void.
When the consent of a party is obtained through undue influence
- athe agreement is void
- bthe agreement is void ab initio
- cvoidable at the option of the aggrieved party
- dnone of the above
Answer & solution
Correct answer: C
Per Section 19A of the Indian Contract Act, consent caused by undue influence makes the agreement voidable at the option of the party whose consent was so obtained.
The liability of a surety
- aarises only if the principal debtor has no means to pay
- barises upon the death of the principal debtor
- cis joint and several
- dnone of the above
Answer & solution
Correct answer: C
Under Section 128 of the Indian Contract Act, the surety's liability is co-extensive with that of the principal debtor; it is joint and several, so the creditor may proceed against the surety without first exhausting remedies against the principal debtor.
A surety is also called
- aa hopeless debtor
- ba favoured debtor
- ca semi debtor
- dnone of the above
Answer & solution
Correct answer: B
A surety is traditionally described as a 'favoured debtor' because the law leans in his favour and any material variation in the contract discharges him.
An authority of an agent
- amust be express
- bmay be express or implied
- calways implied
- dnone of the above
Answer & solution
Correct answer: B
Under Section 187 of the Indian Contract Act, an agent's authority may be express or implied.
In a contract of Indemnity, the Promissor undertakes to make good the loss
- acaused by him only
- bcaused by other person only
- cwhether caused by Promissor or other person
- dloss caused through flood only
Answer & solution
Correct answer: C
Section 124 of the Indian Contract Act defines a contract of indemnity as one to save the promisee from loss caused either by the conduct of the promisor himself or by the conduct of any other person.
Contract of guarantee is a
- abipartite agreement
- bdebtless agreement
- ctripartite agreement
- dquasi contract.
Answer & solution
Correct answer: C
A contract of guarantee (Section 126, Indian Contract Act) is a tripartite arrangement involving the principal debtor, the creditor and the surety.
In a contract of guarantee
- athere will be an implied promise by the principal debtor to indemnify the surety
- bThere will be a promise by the creditor to compensate the surety
- cthere will be a contract to indemnify the principal debtor by the surety
- dnone of the above
Answer & solution
Correct answer: A
Under Section 145 of the Indian Contract Act, in every contract of guarantee there is an implied promise by the principal debtor to indemnify the surety.
Right of Subrogation in a contract of guarantee is available to
- aa creditor
- ba surety
- ca principal debtor
- dnone of the above
Answer & solution
Correct answer: B
Under Section 140 of the Indian Contract Act, on payment of the guaranteed debt the surety is invested with all the rights of the creditor against the principal debtor; the right of subrogation belongs to the surety.
Consideration to create agency under section 185 of the Indian Contract Act
- ais necessary
- bpartly necessary
- cnot necessary
- dnone of the above
Answer & solution
Correct answer: C
Section 185 of the Indian Contract Act expressly provides that no consideration is necessary to create an agency.
Section 31 of the Specific Relief Act provides for
- acancellation of written instruments under certain circumstances
- bsuits for easements by necessity
- csuits relating to adverse possession
- dnone of the above
Answer & solution
Correct answer: A
Section 31 of the Specific Relief Act, 1963 deals with when cancellation of written instruments may be ordered.
Specific Relief Act provides for
- apossessory remedy in respect of immovable property only
- bpossessory remedy in respect of immovable property only
- cpossessory remedy in respect of both immovable and immovable property
- dnone of the above
Answer & solution
Correct answer: A
Section 6 of the Specific Relief Act provides a possessory remedy in respect of immovable property; options a and b are identical and 'movable' is not covered there, so the intended correct choice is the immovable-property option (a).
In respect of a contract which in its nature is determinable
- aspecific performance cannot be granted
- bspecific performance can be granted
- cspecific performance can be granted in part
- dnone of the above
Answer & solution
Correct answer: A
Under Section 14(1) (read with Section 14(c)) of the Specific Relief Act, a contract which is in its nature determinable cannot be specifically enforced.
To restrain a person from instituting or prosecuting any proceeding in a criminal matter
- ainjunction can be granted
- binjunction cannot be granted
- cinjunction can be granted if the plaintiff executes indemnity bond to indemnify the defendant
- dnone of the above
Answer & solution
Correct answer: B
Under Section 41(d) of the Specific Relief Act, an injunction cannot be granted to restrain any person from instituting or prosecuting any proceeding in a criminal matter.
Suit for possession by a person dispossessed of immovable property by the government has to be filed against the government
- awithin six months
- bone year
- ctwo years
- dnone of the above
Answer & solution
Correct answer: D
Under Article 47 of the Limitation Act read with Section 6 of the Specific Relief Act, a suit to recover possession from the Government must be filed within 30 days; neither six months, one year nor two years is correct, so 'none of the above'.
When the performance of the contract involves supervision of Performance and continuous duty by the Court, specific performance
- acan be granted
- bcannot be granted
- ccan be granted if the plaintiffs executes indemnity bond
- dnone of the above
Answer & solution
Correct answer: B
Under Section 14(1)(b)/(d) of the Specific Relief Act, a contract whose performance involves the continuous duty/supervision of the court cannot be specifically enforced.
Article 5 of the Constitution of India deals with
- athe union
- bcitizenship
- cfundamental duties
- dnone of the above
Answer & solution
Correct answer: B
Article 5 of the Constitution deals with citizenship at the commencement of the Constitution.
Article 51A. of the Constitution of India relates to
- afundamental duties
- bfundamental rights
- cappointment ofJudges to District Judiciary
- dnone of the above
Answer & solution
Correct answer: A
Article 51A of the Constitution enumerates the Fundamental Duties.
The directive principles of the State policy
- ashall be enforceable by the Army
- b. shall be enforceable by any Court
- cit shall be the duty of the state of apply these principles in making laws
- dnone of the above
Answer & solution
Correct answer: C
Article 37 makes the Directive Principles non-justiciable but declares it the duty of the State to apply these principles in making laws.
Recruitment of persons other than District Judges to the judicial service is provided
- aunder Article 234
- bunder Article 332
- cunder Article 14
- dnone of the above
Answer & solution
Correct answer: A
Article 234 of the Constitution provides for recruitment of persons other than District Judges to the judicial service.
Article 14 of Constitution of India deals with
- aland reforms
- bequality before law
- cequality of opportunity in matters of private employment
- dnone of the above
Answer & solution
Correct answer: B
Article 14 guarantees equality before the law and equal protection of the laws.
The Chairman of Council of States is
- athe chairman of the standing committee of the Parliament
- bthe leader of Lok Sabha
- cthe opposition leader of Lok Sabha
- dthe Vice President
Answer & solution
Correct answer: D
Under Article 89, the Vice-President of India is the ex-officio Chairman of the Council of States (Rajya Sabha).
Legislative power of the Governor includes
- ato declare the decision of a cabinet as void
- bto declare financial emergency
- cto declare cut-down in the salaries of the State employees
- dto promulgate ordinances
Answer & solution
Correct answer: D
Under Article 213, the Governor's legislative power includes the power to promulgate ordinances when the Legislature is not in session.
When a person voluntarily acquires citizenship of a foreign state
- ahe shall not be a citizen of India
- bhe can continue to be a citizen of India
- che can have the citizenship; of India with the permission of the jurisdictional Deputy Commissioner
- dnone of the above
Answer & solution
Correct answer: A
Under Article 9 of the Constitution and Section 9 of the Citizenship Act, a person who voluntarily acquires the citizenship of a foreign State ceases to be a citizen of India.
Law declared by the Supreme Court is binding on all the courts in India
- aas per Article 147
- bas per Article 141
- cas per Article 145
- das per Article 143
Answer & solution
Correct answer: B
Article 141 of the Constitution provides that the law declared by the Supreme Court is binding on all courts within the territory of India.
Protection of tenants against eviction is provided under
- asection 27 of Karnataka Rent Act
- bsection 28 of Karnataka Rent Act
- csection 21 of Karnataka Rent Act
- dnone of the above
Answer & solution
Correct answer: A
Section 27 of the Karnataka Rent Act, 1999 is titled 'Protection of tenants against eviction' and bars eviction except on the specified grounds.
A warrant of arrest may be executed
- awithin the jurisdiction of the police station covering the place of offence
- bwithin the limits of the jurisdiction of the trial court
- cwithin the district of location of the trial court
- dat any place in India
Answer & solution
Correct answer: D
Under Section 77 CrPC a warrant of arrest may be executed at any place in India; it is not confined to the issuing court's jurisdiction.
Attachment of property of a person absconding can be made by the Court
- aafter issuing proclamation
- bbefore issuing proclamation
- corder simultaneous proclamation and attachment
- dnone of the above
Answer & solution
Correct answer: A
Under Section 83 CrPC, attachment of an absconder's property is ordered only after publication of the proclamation under Section 82 (subject to the proviso permitting simultaneous attachment in special cases).
An order for search in his presence can be made by
- aany Magistrate
- bonly Judicial Magistrate
- conly Executive Magistrate
- dnone of the above
Answer & solution
Correct answer: A
Under Section 103 CrPC any Magistrate may direct a search to be made in his presence of any place for which he is competent to issue a search warrant.
Under Section 190 of Code of Criminal Procedure, cognizance may be taken by the Magistrate
- aupon receiving police report of such facts
- bupon receiving FIR
- cupon receiving Property Form
- dnone of the above
Answer & solution
Correct answer: A
Section 190(1)(b) CrPC: a Magistrate may take cognizance upon a police report of facts constituting the offence (the report under Section 173(2)).
Police report means
- aa complaint given to a police
- ba report forwarded by a police officer to his superior officer
- ca report forwarded by a police officer to a magistrate under sub- section 2 of section 173.
- dnone of the above
Answer & solution
Correct answer: C
'Police report' is defined in Section 2(r) CrPC as a report forwarded by a police officer to a Magistrate under sub-section (2) of Section 173.
Regarding the search of the persons wrongfully confined, a search warrant may be issued by
- aDistrict Magistrate
- bExecutive Magistrate
- cSuperintendent of Police
- dnone of the above
Answer & solution
Correct answer: A
Under Section 97 CrPC, a search warrant for a person wrongfully confined may be issued by a District Magistrate, Sub-Divisional Magistrate or Magistrate of the first class.
Where the complaint is made to a magistrate who is not competent to take cognizance of the offence,' he shall
- aif the complaint is in writing, return it for presentation to the proper court with an endorsement to that effect
- breport for conferring jurisdiction to him
- csubmit the records to the District Court
- dnone of the above
Answer & solution
Correct answer: A
Section 201 CrPC: if the complaint is in writing the Magistrate not competent to take cognizance shall return it for presentation to the proper court with an endorsement to that effect.
To summon and examine a person as a witness
- athat person must have been cited as a witness in the final report
- bhe should have been summoned
- cit is not necessary that he should have been cited as a witness
- dnone of the above
Answer & solution
Correct answer: C
Under Section 311 CrPC the court may summon any person as a witness; it is not necessary that he was cited as a witness, if his evidence appears essential to a just decision.
To take cognizance of an offence for defamation punishable under chapter XXI of the Indian Penal Code
- aa member of NGO only shall file complaint
- bonly police officer can file a complaint
- ccomplaint made by the aggrieved person only
- dnone of the above
Answer & solution
Correct answer: C
Defamation (Chapter XXI IPC) is non-cognizable; under Section 199 CrPC a court takes cognizance only upon a complaint made by the person aggrieved.
A court of Magistrate may grant bail
- aunder section 437 Cr. PC
- bunder section 438 Cr. PC
- cunder section 439 Cr. PC
- dnone of the above
Answer & solution
Correct answer: A
A Magistrate's power to grant bail is under Section 437 CrPC; Section 438 is anticipatory bail (High Court/Sessions) and 439 is the special power of the High Court/Court of Session.
Abetment is an offence
- aonly when the offence is committed
- bonly when the abettor is present at the place of offence
- conly when the abettor participates in physical commission of the offence
Answer & solution
Correct answer: A
While abetment itself is complete on instigation, abetment as a substantive punishable wrong attaches when the act abetted is committed (Sec. 109 IPC); presence/participation is not required. Among the options, 'only when the offence is committed' is the intended answer.
Minimum sentence of imprisonment specified for offence punishable under section 304-8 Indian Penal Code is
- a10 years
- b7 years
- c12 years
- d9 years
Answer & solution
Correct answer: B
Section 304-B IPC prescribes imprisonment of not less than seven years (extendable to life) for dowry death.
A body warrant in a criminal case is addressed to
- aThe officer of the Jurisdictional police station
- bThe superintendent of police of the concerned district
- cThe officer in-charge of the jail, where the accused is detained/lodged
- dOireetly to the accused
Answer & solution
Correct answer: C
A body (production) warrant is addressed to the officer in-charge of the jail where the accused is detained, directing his production before the court.
Statement under Sec. 161 of the Code of Criminal Procedure can be taken note for
- acorroboration only
- bcontradiction only
- cboth Corroboration and Contradiction
- dneither corroboration nor contradiction
Answer & solution
Correct answer: B
A statement recorded under Section 161 CrPC is unsigned and may be used only to contradict the witness as provided in Section 162 CrPC; it cannot be used for corroboration.
The officer competent to record statement under section 164 of Code of Criminal Procedure is
- aSessions Judge
- bChief Judicial Magistrate
- cJudicial Magistrate
- dAny police officer of the rank of Inspector and above
Answer & solution
Correct answer: C
Under Section 164 CrPC, a Metropolitan or Judicial Magistrate is competent to record confessions and statements; police officers cannot.
‘Complaint’ under Section 2(d) of the Code of Criminal Procedure means
- aallegation made in writing only to the police
- breport made by a police officer to his superior
- cincludes a police report |
- dany allegation made orally or in writing to a Magistrate
Answer & solution
Correct answer: D
Section 2(d) CrPC defines 'complaint' as any allegation made orally or in writing to a Magistrate, with a view to his taking action, but does not include a police report.
If an offence is committed by a person in the presence of a Magistrate,
- ahe may order for the arrest of that person
- bhe cannot order for the arrest but inform the police
- csend information to the jurisdiction magistrate to arrest the person who has committed the offence
- dnone, of the above
Answer & solution
Correct answer: A
Under Section 44 CrPC, when an offence is committed in the presence of a Magistrate within his local jurisdiction, he may himself arrest or order the arrest of the offender.
Converting the property of others for one’s own use, amounts to
- abreach of trust
- bCheating
- cmisappropriation of property
- dnone of the above
Answer & solution
Correct answer: C
Dishonestly converting to one's own use property belonging to another is criminal misappropriation of property under Section 403 IPC.
Stolen property means the one connected to
- atheft only
- bextortion only
- crobbery only
- dany of the above
Answer & solution
Correct answer: D
Under Section 410 IPC, 'stolen property' includes property the possession of which has been transferred by theft, extortion, robbery, criminal misappropriation or criminal breach of trust.
Attempt to commit suicide
- ais an offence
- bis an offence only if the suicide is complete against that person
- cthat attempted person is punishable under section 306 IPC
- dnone of the above
Answer & solution
Correct answer: A
Attempt to commit suicide is an offence under Section 309 IPC (as it stood at the time of the exam). Section 306 deals with abetment of suicide, not the attempt.
Kidnapping is of
- aonly one kind
- bis of two kinds
- cis of three kinds
- dnone of the above
Answer & solution
Correct answer: B
Section 359 IPC: kidnapping is of two kinds — kidnapping from India (Sec. 360) and kidnapping from lawful guardianship (Sec. 361).
Putting a person in fear of injury to induce him to deliver property or valuable security
- ais robbery
- bis extortion
- cis lurking
- dnone of the above
Answer & solution
Correct answer: B
Putting a person in fear of injury to dishonestly induce delivery of property or valuable security is extortion under Section 383 IPC.
Mere preparation is an offence, if it is
- ato commit robbery
- bto commit extortion
- cto commit dacoity
- dnone of the above
Answer & solution
Correct answer: C
Mere preparation is punishable in the case of dacoity — Section 399 IPC penalises making preparation to commit dacoity.
To constitute unlawful assembly in prosecution of common object to commit an offence, the minimum number of persons are
- a5 or more
- b3 or more
- c2 or more
- dnone of the above
Answer & solution
Correct answer: A
Under Section 141 IPC an unlawful assembly requires five or more persons with a common object.
Accident in doing a lawful act
- ais a general exception under| section 80 IPC
- bis an offence
- cis a mis-conduct
- dnone of the above
Answer & solution
Correct answer: A
Accident in doing a lawful act by lawful means without criminal intent is a general exception under Section 80 IPC.
When two or more persons agree to do an illegal act
- ait amounts to abetment
- battempt to commit dacoity
- ccriminal conspiracy
- dnone of the above
Answer & solution
Correct answer: C
An agreement between two or more persons to do an illegal act (or a legal act by illegal means) is criminal conspiracy under Section 120A IPC.
To constitute an offence of ‘Dowry death’
- ait includes natural death of a married women but within 7 years of her marriage
- bun-natural death of a married women within 7 years of her marriage due to burns, bodily injury or otherwise than under normal circumstances
- cun-natural death of a married women even beyond 7 years from the date of her marriage
- dnone of the above
Answer & solution
Correct answer: B
Dowry death (Section 304B IPC) is the unnatural death of a woman by burns/bodily injury or otherwise than under normal circumstances within 7 years of marriage, connected to dowry demand.
The maximum sentence of imprisonment and fine that a Judicial Magistrate of First class can impose is
- a5 years and Rs. 10,000/-
- b6 years and Rs. 10,000/-
- c3 years and Rs.5,000/-
- d10 years and Rs.25,000/-
Answer & solution
Correct answer: C
Under Section 29 CrPC, a Magistrate of the First Class may pass a sentence of imprisonment up to 3 years and fine up to Rs. 5,000 (later raised to Rs. 10,000 by the 2005 amendment, but for this paper option c reflects the classic limit).
In an offence of adultery
- awife is also punishable along with the adulterer
- bwife is not punishable as an abettor
- cwife is liable for fine only
- dnone of the above
Answer & solution
Correct answer: B
Under Section 497 IPC (as then in force), only the adulterer man was punishable; the wife was expressly not punishable even as an abettor.
If fingers of a person are cut and separated in an offence, it amounts to
- agrievous hurt
- bsimple hurt
- cemasculation
- dnone of the above
Answer & solution
Correct answer: A
Privation of any member or joint, including severing fingers, is grievous hurt under Section 320 IPC.
The contents of document may be proved
- aonly by primary evidence
- bonly by secondary evidence
- cprimary or secondary evidence
- dnone of the above
Answer & solution
Correct answer: C
Section 61 of the Indian Evidence Act: contents of documents may be proved either by primary or by secondary evidence.
Oral account of the contents of the document given by some person who has himself seen it, is
- asecondary evidence
- bprimary evidence
- cexpert evidence
- dhearsay evidence
Answer & solution
Correct answer: A
Under Section 63 of the Evidence Act, oral accounts of the contents of a document given by a person who has himself seen it constitute secondary evidence.
The expression “Court” includes
- aall Judges and Magistrates j
- barbitrators only
- cconciliators only
- dnone of the above
Answer & solution
Correct answer: A
Section 3 of the Evidence Act defines 'Court' to include all Judges and Magistrates, and all persons (except arbitrators) legally authorised to take evidence.
Fact of which the Court will take judicial notice
- arequires proof
- bneed not be proved
- crequires secondary evidence
- dnone of the above
Answer & solution
Correct answer: B
Under Section 56 of the Evidence Act, a fact of which the Court takes judicial notice need not be proved.
Not proved means
- awhen a fact is neither proved nor dis-proved
- bwhen there is no documentary proof
- cconclusive proof
- dnone of the above
Answer & solution
Correct answer: A
Section 3 of the Evidence Act: a fact is said to be 'not proved' when it is neither proved nor disproved.
Provisions relating to proof of Wills are governed by the
- aIndian Succession Act
- bIndian Evidence Act
- cwills Act
- dnone of the above
Answer & solution
Correct answer: B
Proof of execution of Wills (attestation under Sections 68-71) is governed by the Indian Evidence Act, the evidentiary statute applicable to all documents.
Confession made before a Police Officer
- ashall not be taken as proved against the accused person
- bconclusive proof
- cconfession to be considered if a memo is filed by the police officer
- dnone of the above
Answer & solution
Correct answer: A
Section 25 of the Evidence Act bars a confession made to a police officer from being proved against the accused.
First Information lodged to the Police can be used in a trial court for
- acorroboration only
- bcontradiction onlyM
- ccorroboration and contradiction
- dnone of the above
Answer & solution
Correct answer: C
An FIR is not substantive evidence but may be used to corroborate (Section 157) or contradict (Section 145) its maker.
Copy compared with the original
- ais secondary evidence
- bis primary evidence
- cis pictorial evidence
- dnone of the above
Answer & solution
Correct answer: A
Under Section 63 of the Evidence Act, copies compared with the original constitute secondary evidence.
The presumption as to electronic record of 5 years old provided under section 90A of Evidence Act
- ais regarding electronic signature
- bthumb impression
- cexecution of the documents
- dnone of the above
Answer & solution
Correct answer: C
Section 90A of the Evidence Act raises a presumption regarding the due execution and electronic signature of a five-year-old electronic record; among the options, execution of the document is the correct subject.
The Union Law Minister is
- aSri. Sadananda Gowda
- bSri. Rajanath Singh
- cSri. Arun Jaitley
- dnone of the above
Answer & solution
Correct answer: A
D.V. Sadananda Gowda was sworn in as Union Minister of Law and Justice on 9 November 2014, holding the post until July 2016.
The author of “Roses in December” is
- aSri. P.M.Munshi
- bSri. Kamalcharanpanth
- cSri. Justice M.C.Chagla
- dSri. Sathyajit Ray
Answer & solution
Correct answer: C
'Roses in December' is the autobiography of Justice M.C. Chagla, former Chief Justice of the Bombay High Court.
Total number of assembly constituencies for which the elections are held in Karnataka are
- a224
- b234
- c214
- d208
Answer & solution
Correct answer: A
The Karnataka Legislative Assembly has 224 elected constituencies (plus one nominated Anglo-Indian member historically).
“Vande Mataram11 was written by
- aSri Rabindranath Tagore
- bSri Subhash Chandra Bose
- cSri Surendranath Banerjee
- dShri Bankim Chandra Chattarjee
Answer & solution
Correct answer: D
'Vande Mataram' was written by Bankim Chandra Chattopadhyay (Chatterjee) in his novel Anandamath.
Ms. Saina Nehwal is associated with
- aBadminton
- bcricket
- cchess
- dnone of the above
Answer & solution
Correct answer: A
Saina Nehwal is an Indian badminton player.
‘Law Day1, the day on which we accepted/adopted our Constitution is
- a26.11.1949
- b01.11.1956
- c26.01.1950
- d05.08.1947
Answer & solution
Correct answer: A
The Constitution was adopted on 26 November 1949, observed as Law Day (Constitution Day); it came into force on 26 January 1950.
Sea route to India was discovered by
- aColumbus
- bVasco da gama
- cRobert Clive
- dDuplex
Answer & solution
Correct answer: B
Vasco da Gama discovered the sea route to India, reaching Calicut in 1498.
India has won the One day International World Cup in Cricket
- aOnce
- bTwice
- cthrice
- dfour times
Answer & solution
Correct answer: B
As of 2014, India had won the ODI Cricket World Cup twice (1983 and 2011).
The present ChiefJustice of Karnataka is
- aSri Justice N.K.Jain
- bSri Justice I^.K.Sodhi
- cSri Justice Vikramajit Sen
- dSri Justice Subhro Kamal Mukherjee
Answer & solution
Correct answer: D
Flagged: in 2014 the Chief Justice of Karnataka was D.H. Waghela, who is not among the options; S.K. Mukherjee (option d) only became CJ in 2016. None of the listed options were CJ at the paper's date, so this question appears to carry an outdated/erroneous key; option d is the nearest listed CJ of Karnataka.
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