LIBERTY

Liberty means Broadly speaking, liberty is the ability to do as one pleases. It is a synonym for the word freedom. In modern politics, liberty is the state of being free within society from oppressive restrictions imposed by authority on one’s way of life, behaviour, or political views.

What are the types of liberty?

There are several types of liberty.They are:

  1. Freedom of association.
  2. Freedom of belief.
  3. Freedom of speech.
  4. Freedom to express oneself.
  5. Freedom of the press.
  6. Freedom to choose one’s state in life.
  7. Freedom of religion.
  8. Freedom of bondage and slavery.

Liberty is defined as freedom from captivity or control. An example of liberty is the ability to go where you want, do what you want and say what you want.

IMPORTANCE OF LIBERTY:-

Along with the right to life, the right to liberty is one of the most fundamental human rights. The right to liberty is the right of all persons to freedom of their person – freedom of movement and freedom from arbitrary detention by others. … No-one shall be subjected to arbitrary arrest or detention.

CONCLUSION:-

Liberty is a needed thing for every one.

MURDER

In India according to Section 300 of the Indian Penal Code, 1860, murder is defined as follows:

Murder.–Except in the cases hereinafter excepted, culpable homicide is murder, if the act by which the death is caused is done with the intention of causing death, or- 167 2ndly.-If it is done with the intention of causing such bodily injury as the offender knows to be likely to cause the death of the person to whom the harm is caused. or- 3rdly.-If it is done with the intention of causing bodily injury to any person and the bodily injury intended to be inflicted is sufficient in the ordinary course of nature to cause death, or- 4thly.-If the person committing the act knows that it is so imminently dangerous that it must, in all probability, cause death, or such bodily injury as is likely to cause death, and commits such act without any e

Culpable homicide (section 299 of Indian Penal Code, 1860)is defined as

By causing death of person other than person whose death was intended.–If a person, by doing anything which he intends or knows to be likely to cause death, commits culpable homicide by causing the death of any person, whose death he neither intends nor knows himself to be likely to cause, the culpable homicide committed by the offender is of the description of which it would have been if he had caused the death of the person whose death he intended or knew himself to be likely to cause for incurring the risk of causing death or such injury as aforesaid.

Culpable homicide is a term wider than murder. Therefore, Culpable homicide is considered as the genus while murder is regarded as a species. Murder is an aggravated form of culpable homicide. In culpable homicide the knowledge is not so definite, while in murder the offender has a definite knowledge that the act would be resulting in death. Thus, the probability of causing death is higher in murder than in culpable homicide.

CAUSES OF MURDER

  • Lust
  • Love
  • Loathing
  • Loot

CIRCUMSTANCES IN AWARDING DEATH SENTENCE

Supreme Court held that following mitigating circumstances are relevant and must be given weightage in determination of sentence.

  • The age of the accused.
  • The probability that the accused would not commit criminal acts of violence as would constitute a continuing threat to the society.
  • The probability that the accused can be reformed and rehabilitated.
  • That in the facts and circumstances of the case the accused believed that he was morally justified in committing the offence.
  • That the accused acted under the duress or domination of another person.
  • That to condition of the accused showed that he was mentally defective and that the said defect impaired his capacity to appreciate the criminality of his conduct.

NAME OF CASES

  • State of Tamil Nadu v. T. Suthanthiraraja
  • State v. Sushil Sharma
  • Swamy Sharaddananda @ Murli Manohar Mishra v. State of Karnataka
  • Prajeet Kumar Singh v. State of Bihar
  • State of Tamil Nadu v. Rajendran

ITS ONLY MURDER IF THEY FIND A BODY OTHERWISE ITS JUST A MISSING PERSON.

THE COMMERCIAL SEX-WORKERS

The commercial sex worker has been a universal being throughout civilization as prostitution is the so-called “oldest profession”. The earliest known record of prostitution appears in ancient Mesopotamia. [2] It is interesting to note that licensed brothels were established in Solon, Greece in around 550 B.C. The Indian Vedas, Vishnu Samhita and the Puranas abound in references to prostitution as an organized, established and necessary institution. Vatsyayana’s Kamasutra describes in detail various types of prostitutes, rules of conduct and the roles played by the procurer, pimp and brothel-keeper. Similarly, Kautilya in his Arthashastra declares the income of pimps, taxable. In the post-vedic era the custom of Devadasi (servants of God) system came into practice. Today, the word ‘devadasi’ is a euphemism for referring to a woman prostituting in the name of religious tradition.

After all this history today we get to see the sight of girls with their faces covered with dupattas and which is not uncommon to television viewers. These young women have a very ordinary dream of a peaceful life with two meals a day, sell their bodies and routinely have to face the law in its annoying, unsparing form. Existing laws allow clients caught with sex workers to be let off easily while the women are held guilty of promoting, furthering and committing moral blasphemy.
The law to tackle prostitution i.e., the Immoral Traffic Prevention Act ( ITPA), 1956 is often misused. Today sex worker’s unions have been formed. However, little has been and is being done to regulate or prohibit flesh trade, estimated to be a Rs. 2000 crore industry annually.

Presently there is this confusion building up as one side reiterates that prostitution should be criminalized on three strands of thought- Morality, Legal Paternalism and Harm to Other. Devlin in his book takes the view that not all-immoral acts calls for criminal sanctions but only those that evoke from people, feelings of intolerance, indignation and disgust. [3] The other side believes in what these unions have been demanding for that to relax laws on loitering and propositioning on streets as well as general soliciting. The Immoral Trafficking (Prevention) Amendment Bill 2005 moved by the Women and Child Department actually included this. The police often use the existing provisions of Section 8 of the ITPA [4], which prohibit seducing or soliciting for purpose of prostitution in public place, to harass streetwalkers. The Bill when passed may amount to legalising prostitution but at least sex workers will not be harassed while soliciting with prospective customers. The question that arises over here is that will the Bill decriminalise the act itself

Hardly, it is so as the Bill on one hand proposes to ease things out for the sex workers; it also aims towards handing out more stringent and harsher punishment to the clients or customers. For the perpetuation of the oldest profession, it is probably right in putting the onus on clients. The earlier repealed law, Suppression of Immoral Traffic (in women and girls) Act ( SITA) of 1956 allowed prosecution of persons other than women only if they “knowingly” or “willingly” forced women into prostitution. Clients and brothel owners escaped punishment by showing ignorance. We should not go much into the SITA, as it stands repealed with the coming into force of the ITPA. What is more important in the present scenario is the wind of change in which the Bill proposes. Some of the main recommendations that are present in The Immoral Trafficking (Prevention) Amendment Bill 2005 are:-
# Permits soliciting by sex workers.
# Punishment to human traffickers enhanced to 10 years’ imprisonment and Rs.1 lakh fine.
# Provides for confiscation of property worth over Rs. 3 lakh, owned by traffickers and agents..

It is something accepted by all that under the present law, only the women are targeted while the clients go scot free. Many attempts to make some remedies were made but only by the ITPA of 1986 when a maximum punishment of three months for soliciting was introduced for clients. Again, there was another restriction in it that the client could not be punished in the act itself if the girl was an adult. Even though the lawmakers have broadened the circle of persons liable for prosecution the law is still focused on punishing women severely.

Under the Immoral Trafficking(Prevention) Act, 2006

the definition of “trafficking in persons” has been proposed to include “recruitment, transportation, transfer, harbouring or receipt by persons” as punishable. The earlier prevalent Section in both SITA and ITPA provided punishment for brothel keeping, pimping, detaining anyone in a brothel, use of premises and procurement, but with the inclusion of the above words, the Act can be used to criminalize receipt and transfer by a client. Clients, after such passing of the Bill, can be fined and jailed for up to three years.

A logic doing its rounds is that, criminalizing the customer and decriminalising the sex worker will be a terrible blow to the sex workers. Police raids will increase and customers will be garrulously harassed. This means fewer clients and a tougher life for sex workers. There even is the possibility that the sex trade will then move underground, which may prove detrimental to the AIDS-control programme in India. We should keep in mind the warning of UN that is clear from the statement:-

According to epidemiologist Tim Brown of the MAP (Monitoring the AIDS Pandemic) Network, over 60 per cent of all contacts of sex workers in a country must use condoms in order to actually roll back the epidemic.

“HIV infections in the so-called general population will not balloon into huge epidemics. This means our prevention efforts must stay focused on populations where infections are actually occurring,” he said. [7]

If the clients are afraid of visiting sex workers, business will suffer. A sex worker will then be under pressure to keep customers and may comply without a condom. This would mean rapid spread of AIDS.

The National Network of Sex Workers, which claims to have over 2, 00,000 members, says it is deeply dejected with the minor changes and that the ITPA should be abolished and the sex trade legitimized. The National Network of Sex Workers have also asked for self-regulatory bodies and boards set up by sex workers’ unions to look after the health, hygiene and education in their areas for themselves and more importantly for their children’s interest. The Network also requests the Government to look into the violence that is involved in trafficking and prostitution. [8]

It is interesting to note that the changes have come at a time when there is this public debate initiated by the Planning Commission that prostitution be legitimized to control the spread of AIDS. It should always be kept in mind that there are more than 11.2 million HIV-positive cases in India. The spread of AIDS can be checked only through the better education of both sex workers and clients. It is just not responsibility of the State but also the responsibility of us to see to it that we have a brighter future.

The unattainable American Dream: The great gatsby

“He who is not contented with what he has, would not be contented with what he would like to have.”

-Socrates

The American dream, a term coined by James Truslow Adams in his 1931 bestseller “Epic of America”, is the belief that anyone can achieve success if they work hard enough, regardless of their class or status. The dream of a land where life is better for everyone, with opportunity for each according to ability or achievement. However, as the years have passed the American dream has become more and more materialistic. Nowadays, people have impulsive and reckless habits, and they are never satisfied. No matter how much they have, they just keep aiming for more. This critique of the American dream was provided in F Scott Fitzgerald’s 1925 classic, “The Great Gatsby”.

Set in the Roaring Twenties, a few years after the first World War, the book begins with the narrator, Nick Carraway, a Yale alumnus and a war veteran, arriving in New York City, and renting a bungalow in the West Egg. This bungalow was next to the luxurious estate of Jay Gatsby, a mysterious multimillionaire and war veteran. The 20s were an interesting time for America. The young were rebellious, jazz was gaining popularity and the economy was prospering. The way society was living was reckless, and Fitzgerald foreshadowed that disaster was bound to happen. Sure enough, in 1929 the infamous Wall Street Crash put a stop to the economic prosperity of America.

Getting back to the novel, Nick observed that Gatsby had stretched out his arm in the direction of a mysterious green light coming from the end of a dock, reaching for something far off. This conveys the idea that no matter how much people possess, they always want more. Gatsby was the personification of the unattainable American Dream. He came from nothing and built his way up into the high society, earning his wealth through crime. Yet, he was never satisfied with what he had and failed to realise how hollow and empty his dream had become. When his ex-lover Daisy, who had gotten married to Tom Buchanan when Gatsby was deployed overseas, told him that she loved him, Gatsby wasn’t satisfied. He still wanted her to say that she never loved her husband. He always desired more and projected his version of the perfect American dream onto Daisy. When Daisy couldn’t bear the weight of his never-ending desires, she chose to stay with Tom, and his inability to win her love shattered his dream. This moment also set the stage for the novel’s tragic ending.

In the book, Gatsby was known for throwing glamorous parties at his lavish mansion which everyone attended, regardless of whether they were invited or not. Each week he had thousands of guests over, but he never formed a bond with anyone of them. His only companion throughout the book was Nick, although it is argued that he was only friends with him to get to Daisy, Nick’s cousin. 

After his death, only a handful of people attended his funeral, including Nick. All his former acquaintances had disappeared, and Daisy and Tom had moved away. Fitzgerald conveyed that the American dream had made people selfish, and criticised the lifestyle of the Americans. Disappointed by the low attendance at the funeral, Nick decides to move away from New York. He also realises that both Tom and Daisy were destructive and selfish people. Thus, Fitzgerald perfectly illustrates the fact that the dream is unattainable, and that one should focus on non-material things which bring more joy than this impossible dream.

The Great Gatsby is regarded as one of the greatest novels of all time.

Confused

Often we can feel confused, dissatisfied with our lives, stuck and unfulfilled, and we can experience…

  1. Depression
  1. Anxiety
  1. Stress
  1. Conflicts in relationships
  1. Fatigue
  1. Apathy
  1. Loneliness
  1. Lack of joy and fulfillment

LIVE-IN-RELATIONSHIPS

Live-in-relationships also referred to as cohabitation is an arrangement where two people live together but are not married.  They are often involved in a romantic or sexually intimate relationship on a long-term or permanent basis.

OBJECTIONS

Contemporary objections to cohabiting couples include religious opposition to non-marital unions, social pressure for couples to get married and potential effects of cohabitation on a child’s development.

EFFECT ON CHILDREN

  • lower performance in school
  • greater risk of suspension or expulsion
  • behavioral and emotional problems

ADVANTAGES

  • No social and legal responsibilities
  • Net practice before the final match
  • Sharing is caring
  • Lesser account abilities and duties
  • Freedom to take decisions
  • Compatibility test
  • Equality and mutual understanding

DISADVANTAGES

  • Free to exit anytime
  • Social Acceptance
  • No new excitement
  • Lack the respect and stability of marriage
  • Societal pressure and criticism
  • Lack of commitment
  • Receiving end
  • Nature, behaviour, temperament, attitude everything changes in partners after marriage

INDIAN LAW

Live-in relationships, being an alien concept to the Indian legislature does not have any legal implications for the couples who live together without marriage involved in the relationship. Since living relationships also support pre-marital sex, there are high chances of a child being born. These children, unlike the successors born out of wedlock, do not have any rights over the inheritance. Besides this, society treats them as illegitimate children, which is unacceptable. However, the Hon’ble Supreme Court cleared them of this ill-fated and granted them the status of a legitimate child along with the right to property. Live-in relationships were legally considered void-ab-initio. But in a judgment in 1978, such relationships are valid for the first time because of the Supreme Court. If the requisites of a marriage such as mental soundness, the fulfillment of the legal age of marriage, consent, etc. are all satisfied, the couple is considered to be in a legal live-in relationship.

DIFFERENCE BETWEEN MARRIAGE AND LIVE IN RELATIONSHIPS

  • The union of two persons that is formally recognized by law is known as marriage. It is a formal commitment between the couple and Live in relationship refers to a kind of an arrangement where a couple decides to live together.
  • Mostly the children born from a marriage are socially accepted and parents often find happiness to have them in their life and Children born out of a live in relationship may require some commitments and it depends upon the couple that how they would manage the raising of children.
  • Marriages come with responsibilities and one tends to be answerable to the other. However, sometimes the freedom may also be restricted and live in relationships are associated with the freedom, both tend to have their own space as no obligations or responsibilities are involved.
  • Marriages are also associated with the union of families rather than the individuals. Even if there is not much involvement of families, but still the marriage is regarded as a serious affair by the parents and  families do not involve much with the couples as the concept of live in relationship is more about exploring each other.

We can safely state that relationships have become a questionable and complex thing to understand. Marriage is also required by the society however the modern generation is busy finding the suitable ways to safeguard their relationship by entering into various test-run techniques. It has become a trend in big cities.

ONLINE NEWS

An online newspaper is the online version of a newspaper, either as a stand-alone publication or as the online version of a printed periodical.

Going online created more opportunities for newspapers, such as competing with broadcast journalism in presenting breaking news in a more timely manner. The credibility and strong brand recognition of well established newspapers, and the close relationships they have with advertisers, are also seen by many in the newspaper industry as strengthening their chances of survival.The movement away from the printing process can also help decrease costs.

Online newspapers, like printed newspapers, have legal restrictions regarding libel, privacy, and copyright,also apply to online publications in most countries as in the UK. Also, the UK Data Protection Act applies to online newspapers and news pages.Up to 2014, the PCC ruled in the UK, but there was no clear distinction between authentic online newspapers and forums or blogs. In 2007, a ruling was passed to formally regulate UK-based online newspapers, news audio, and news video websites covering the responsibilities expected of them and to clear up what is, and what isn’t an online news publication.

News reporters are being taught to shoot video and to write in the succinct manner necessary for internet news pages. Some newspapers have attempted to integrate the internet into every aspect of their operations, e.g., the writing of stories for both print and online, and classified advertisements appearing in both media, while other newspaper websites may be quite different from the corresponding printed newspaper.

An early example of an “online-only” newspaper or magazine was (PLATO) News Report, an online newspaper created by Bruce Parrello in 1974 on the PLATO system at the University of Illinois. Beginning in 1987, the Brazilian newspaper Jornaldodia ran on the state-owned Embratel network, moving to the internet in the 1990s. By the late 1990s, hundreds of U.S. newspapers were publishing online versions, but did not yet offer much interactivity.One example is Britain’s Weekend City Press Review, which provided a weekly news summary online beginning in 1995. Today, online news has become a huge part of society which leads people to argue whether or not it is good for society. Austra Taylor author of the popular book The Peoples Platform argues that online news does not provide the detail needed to fully understand what actually happened. It is more just a fast summary to inform people what happened, but does not give a solution or fixation to the problem.

CONCLUSION:-

Online News plays a key role in our present day to day life.

Product Liability

Product liability refers to a manufacturer or seller being held liable for placing a defective product into the hands of a consumer. Responsibility for a product defect that causes injury lies with all sellers of the product who are in the distribution chain. In general terms, the law requires that a product meet the ordinary expectations of the consumer. When a product has an unexpected defect or danger, the product cannot be said to meet the ordinary expectations of the consumer. There is no federal product liability law. Typically, product liability claims are based on state laws and brought under the theories of negligence, strict liability, or breach of warranty. In addition, a set of commercial statutes in each state, modeled on the Uniform Commercial Code, will contain warranty rules affecting product liability. Defective or dangerous products are the cause of thousands of injuries every year in the U.S. “Product liability law” is the set of legal rules concerning who is responsible for defective or dangerous products but they are different from ordinary injury law. This set of rules sometimes makes it easier for an injured person to recover damage.

Product Defects: Responsible Parties

For product liability to arise, at some point the product must have been sold in the marketplace. Historically, a contractual relationship, known as “privity of contract,” had to exist between the person injured by a product and the supplier of the product in order for the injured person to recover. In most states today, however, that requirement no longer exists, and the injured person does not have to be the purchaser of the product in order to recover. Any person who foreseably could have been injured 

by a defective product can recover for his or her injuries, as long as the product was sold to someone.

 Liability for a product defect could rest with any party in the product’s chain of distribution, such as:

● The product manufacturer;

● A manufacturer of component parts;

● A party that assembles or installs the product;

● The wholesaler; and

● The retail store that sold the product to the consumer.

● For strict liability to apply, the sale of a product must be 

made in the regular course of the supplier’s business. 

Thus, someone who sells a product at a garage sale 

would probably not be liable in a product liability action

Types of Product Defects

Under any theory of liability, a plaintiff in a product liability case must prove that  the product that caused injury was defective and that the defect made the product unreasonably dangerous. There are three types of defects that might cause injury and give rise to manufacturer or supplier liability:

Design Defects – Present in a product from the beginning, even before it is manufactured, in that something in the design of the product is inherently unsafe.

Manufacturing Defects – Those that occur in the course of a product’s manufacture or assembly.

Marketing Defects – Flaws in the way a product is marketed, such as improper labeling, insufficient instructions, or inadequate safety warnings.

Unavoidably Unsafe Products

By their nature, some products simply cannot be made safer without losing their usefulness. For example, an electric knife that is too dull to injure anyone would also be useless for its intended purpose. It is generally believed that, as to such products, users and consumers are the best equipped to minimize risk. Thus, while a product might not be deemed unreasonably dangerous, manufacturers and suppliers of unavoidably unsafe products must give proper warnings of the dangers and risks of their products so that consumers can make informed decisions regarding them.

Common Defenses to Product Liability

Claims

A defense often raised in product liability cases is that the 

plaintiff has not sufficiently identified the supplier of the product that allegedly caused the injury. A plaintiff must be able to connect the product with the party(ies) responsible for manufacturing or supplying it. There is an exception to this rule, known as the “market share liability” exception, which applies in cases involving defective medications. Where a plaintiff cannot identify which of the pharmaceutical companies that supply a particular drug supplied the drug he/she took, each manufacturer will be held liable according to its percentage of sales in the area where the injury occurred.

Need Help With a Product Liability Claim?

Product liability actions are quite complex, and establishing legal fault often requires the assistance and testimony of experts. Additionally, every state has its own laws and specific statutes that will affect product liability action.

If you or a loved one has suffered an injury caused by a potentially defective product, an experienced product liability attorney will be able to answer your questions and protect your interests. Learn more about state-specific laws on our products liability legal answers page.

Product Liability Law In India

 India does not have a general product liability statute, but there are several general laws that protect consumers from defective products. The CPA has provisions for a complaint to be filed in relation to goods that are hazardous to life and safety (in contravention of any standards imposed by law) or otherwise defective. The Act also defines ‘defect’ to mean ‘any fault, imperfection or shortcoming in the quality, quantity, potency, purity or standard that is required to be maintained by or under any law for the time being in force or under any contract, express or implied, or as is claimed by the trader in any manner whatsoever in relation to any goods’. There are other specific statutes that contain provisions relating to product safety, standards and regulations such as:

1.         The Food Safety and Standards Act. 2006;

2.         The Drugs and Cosmetics Act 1940;

   3.    The Drugs and Magic Remedies (Objectionable  Advertisements) Act 1954 and the Drugs and Magic Remedies (Objectionable Advertisements) Rules 1955;

   4.    The Legal Metrology Act 2009 and the 

   5.    Legal Metrology (Package Commodities) Rules    2011;

   6.    The Indian Contract Act 1872

   7.    The Essential Commodities Act 1955;

   8.    The Agricultural Produce (Grading and Marketing) Act 1937;

   9.    The Bureau of Indian Standards Act 1986;

  10.   The Insecticides Act 1968;the Standards of Weights and Measures Act, 1976;

  11.   The Energy Conservation Act 2001;

  12.   The Insurance Regulatory and       Development Authority of India Act 1999;the Railway Claims Tribunal Act 1987; and the Electricity Act 2003.

A general duty is also imposed under the Sale of Goods Act whereby the sale is subject to implied conditions as to quality or fitness, merchantable quality and conformity with the sellers’ description. In some cases of goods being sold without warranty or other standard conditions in favour of the purchaser, the courts may occasionally resort to custom or trade practice to determine the normal antecedents of a sale in the relevant product. The Competition Act 2002 came into force after some amendments in May 2009. The Act amended the CPA to insert references to the unfair trade practices (deriving from the thereby repealed Monopolies & Restrictive Trade Practices Act 1969), which are defined in section 2(r) of the CPA, covering any form of false or misleading representation, statement or advertisement, these are actionable through the usual consumer complaint process. The proposed Consumer Protection Bill 2018 contains Chapter VI creating a new statutory product liability that derives from

• Personal injury, death, or property damage caused to the consumer resulting from defects in the manufacture, construction, design, formula, preparation, assembly, testing, service, warning, instruction, marketing, packaging, or labelling of any product, making the manufacturer or producer liable; and • Manufacturing defects, deviations from manufacturing norms, lack of proper instructions and warnings and failure to conform to an express warranty. The proposed Consumer Protection Bill 2018 also appears to be directed at changing the law in favour of consumers by increasing the list of causes-of-action set out under what constitutes a complaint. It has introduced ‘a claim for product liability action against the product manufacturers, product seller or product service provider’ and also widens the concept of purchase to include online transactions.

Product Liability under the Consumer Protection Act, 2019

 Sections 82 to 87, appearing in Chapter VI of CPA 2019, provide an all-encompassing scheme which would apply to every claim for compensation under a product liability action. CPA 2019, expressly or by necessary implication, does not indicate that these new provisions of product liability will also apply to product liability actions already pending before various consumer fora. However, since these provisions create new rights and liabilities, there is a presumption in law that they are prospective in operation CPA 2019 defines product liability as “the responsibility of a product manufacturer or product seller, of any product or service, to compensate for any harm caused to a consumer by such defective product manufactured or sold or by deficiency in services relating thereto”. A product liability action can be filed against a ‘product manufacturer’ or a ‘product service provider’ or a ‘product seller’, as the case may be. CPA 2019 defines each of these expressions in very wide terms to bring within their fold every possible aspect of a product liability claim. CPA 2019 also delineates the situations in which they will be held liable.

Liability of a product seller

(i)   he has exercised substantial control over the designing, testing, manufacturing, packaging or labelling of a product that caused harm;

(ii)   he has altered or modified the product and such alteration or modification was the substantial factor in causing the harm;

(iii)  he has made an express warranty of a product independent of any express warranty made by a manufacturer and the product failed to conform to such warranty

(iv)  the product has been sold by him and the identity of product manufacturer of such product is not known, or if known, the service of notice or process or warrant cannot be effected on him or he is not subject to the law which is in force in India or the order, if any, passed or to be passed cannot be enforced against him;

(v)  he failed to exercise reasonable care in assembling, inspecting or maintaining such product.

Liability of a product manufacturer

(i)  the product contains a manufacturing defect;

(ii) the product is defective in design;

(iii) there is a deviation from manufacturing specifications;

(iv) the product does not conform to the express warranty;

(v) the product fails to contain adequate instructions of correct usage to prevent harm or any warning regarding improper or incorrect usage.

Exceptions to a product liability action

(i) The product was misused, altered or modified at the time of harm. Curiously, as per this exception, there cannot be a product liability action against a product seller. This is somewhat intriguing, since this exception should equally apply to a product manufacturer or a product service provider.

(ii)  In any product liability action based on the failure to provide adequate warnings or instructions, the product manufacturer will not be liable, if-

 •The product was purchased by an employer for use at the workplace and the product manufacturer had provided warnings or instructions to the employer; or

•The product was sold as a component or material to be used in another product and necessary warnings or instructions were given by the product manufacturer to the purchaser of such component or material, but the harm was caused to the complainant by use of the end product in which such component or material was used;

 •The product ought to have been used only by or under the supervision of an expert; or

•The complainant, while using the product, was under the influence of alcohol etc.

(iii)  A product manufacturer will not be liable for failure to instruct or warn about a danger which is obvious or commonly known to the user of such product.

Even prior to CPA 2019, in most product liability actions, one or more of the above defenses were taken. These defenses now have statutory recognition. CPA 2019 does not say that the defences set out are the only defenses to any product liability action. It, however, remains to be seen how the courts will interpret these provisions. Interestingly, consumer courts in India, being generally inclined to favour the evidence of a consumer, treat technical defences adopted by manufacturers with some disdain and rarely allow reliance upon long-winded warranty clauses especially if they are incorporated by reference into a manufacturer’s standard warranty (see General Motors v Major Gen B S Suhag 2008 decision of the NCDRC). The NCDRC has also laid down, in this regard, that section 2(1)(e)(v) of the CPA clearly implies that if standard prescribed under some law are not maintained, the product shall be construed to be hazardous (see Asia Tea Company and Ors v On behalf of Commissioner, Civil Supplies and Consumer Protection Department, Consumer Association of India (I (2017)CPJ461(NC).

Occasionally the consumer courts treat a complainant’s case with suspicion when it is apparent that the product has already been well used and without complaint (see Royal Enfield case cited in question 11 and General Motors India Pvt Ltd v GS Fertilizers (2013 decision of the NCDRC)).

Expiry of the warranty period may not prevent a court from awarding damages when the cause of action is stated to have occurred during the warranty (see Ashok Leyland Ltd v Gopal Sharma & Ors (II (2014) CPJ 394 (NC)) and, in some cases, the consumer forum may even extend the warranty for the period of distress (see Balaji Motors v Devendra and Another II (2013) CPJ 534 (NC). In Maruti Udyog Ltd v Susheel Kumar Gabgotra and Ors (AIR 2006 SC 1586 ), the complainant filed a complaint alleging that the new car he bought from the respondent was faulty and therefore the respondent was liable to replace it. The state commission and a division bench of the Jammu & Kashmir High Court directed the respondent to replace the car with a new one. In the appeal before the Supreme Court, the appellant contended that both the Commission and the High Court erred in holding that there was an admission to replace the car or admission of any manufacturing defect. The warranty condition clearly refers to the replacement of the defective part and not of the car. The Supreme Court, while reversing the decision of the High Court, held that the warranty conditions are expressly stated, it was not a case of silence of a contract of sale as to warranty and therefore the High Court was not justified in directing replacement of the vehicle.

Causation requires a direct link between the product defect and the injury caused. A possible novus actus interveniens (outside act or intervention of a third party) can be asserted as a defence to demonstrate that the causal link between the loss caused and the defendant’s area of responsibility is broken (in K Madhusudan Rao v Air France, Revision Petition No. 3792 of 2008 decided by the NCDRC on 1 April 2010, a case was successfully defended relying on this principle since a theft of a passenger’s valuables in a hotel lobby could not be pinned upon the airline that had arranged for the hotel on account of a cancelled flight). Similarly, a product defect must be treated as a sine qua non or causa causans for the injury and not a contributing factor.

The law in this regard evolves from a few unfortunate cases such as one involving a defective unserviced escalator, which caused the death of a minor (Geeta Jethani and Others v Airports Authority of India [III, 2004 CPJ 106 NC]). In re Karuna Ketan Biswas v Airports Authority of India and Ors II (2013)CPJ37(WB) (decided on 30 May 2013 by the SCDRC West Bengal), the Airports Authority of India was held not liable for deficiency in their services but was directed to compensate the complainant by way of an ex gratia payment of 50,000 rupees. Although the manufacturer (Otis) was made a party to the litigation, it was not held liable, owing to the lapsed warranty and maintenance contract, so that the owner-operator of the escalator was held to be negligent.

The doctrine of res ipsa loquitur may be invoked to transfer the burden of proof onto the manufacturer (see Ashok Leyland Ltd v Gopal Sharma & Ors [II (2014) CPJ 394 (NC)]. In such cases, it could be argued that maintenance should only be required to ensure that the machinery functions at its optimum capacity, but the manufacturing process should be such that there are built-in safety mechanisms (such as an auto-cut mechanism in case of an escalator or emergency brakes in a lift) to prevent the machine from becoming hazardous, and in the absence of such safety mechanisms, there could be an automatic presumption of defect in the manufacturing process following an accident that caused death or injury (see Geeta Jethani v AAI).

Once it is assumed that the product is defective, then the manufacturer must establish that the defect (or other failure owing to bad maintenance) could not have arisen from the manufacturing process. In a manufacturing defect case, the plaintiff still bears the burden of proving that the product in question was faulty or defective. Often the manufacturer’s design or marketing standards can be used to show that the product was defective, but proving how or why the flaw or defect occurred can be difficult for the complainant. Ordinarily, the burden of proof to demonstrate that a product caused a specific injury would be on the claimant, but there have been several instances of defects leading to an unreasonable number of visits to the workshop (see TELCO in question 11) or where engine replacement was necessary during the warranty period (see Honda Siel Cars in question 12). The burden of proof to show any defect in goods is on always on the person who alleges the deficiency, and the cost of getting the product tested must ordinarily be borne by the party alleging the defect (see Jai Prakash Verma v JK Lakshmi Cement Ltd II (2013) CPJ 54 (NC)).

Conclusion

When compared to the earlier Act of 1986, CPA 2019 is far more comprehensive and in tune with the consumer protection regimes elsewhere around the world. The introduction of a product liability regime is a welcome change and will streamline product liability actions. There is a clear shift in principle of buyer beware to seller beware. Even though some aspects are unclear, the new regime is set to change the legal landscape of India pertaining to product liability. The ease of approaching consumer forums and the strict regime will only push consumers to experiment with these provisions to a new high. Product manufacturers, sellers and service providers will need to ensure that they have done their due diligence properly to be compliant with the various requirements under different legislations. A checklist of such compliances backed with proper legal and technical advice would go a long way in protecting their interest and the interest of the consumers.

Quitting your job for social media

In one of my previous articles, I talked about influencer culture and the growth in the number of influencers in the past decade. One of the things that I mentioned was how some influencers tend to leave their day jobs and possibly even drop out of school to pursue social media. This was perhaps not very normal when influencers were just coming about, but has become extremely normalised in the past year or two. It is also more common amongst those having a big platform on YouTube than it is with any other form of social media. But now the question that arises is, should influencers quit their day jobs or drop out of school to pursue social media?

Up until the late 90s and early 2000s, getting a standard 9-5 job, working your way up the corporate ladder and retiring at 60 was the norm. However, the younger generations are realising from a very early age that they want to break this norm. They want to do something creatively fulfilling and entertaining, which is one of the many reasons why the number of influencers has risen. People as young as 15 have gained fame and are making millions. However, it is very easy for this fame to get to their head and convince them that they are invincible. Their audience keeps praising them which only inflates their ego, and they’re eventually convinced to drop out of school. 

It is understandable why this is so appealing. Who would want to sit in a classroom memorising formulas when you can be making millions from the comfort of your home. Some say that there is no right or wrong path for students to follow in life. However, it should be realised that it is simply not realistic for children to drop out of school. Your knowledge is a weapon no one can take from you. It is a common fact that some of the stuff that school teaches you is nonsensical and you won’t ever need to “solve for x” in real life. But this doesn’t mean that you should call it overrated and drop out. As much as you hate it, it is a crucial part of life. It gives you some important skills needed to be a functioning member of society. We need to stop propagating the idea that school is worthless and kids should drop out, and also better the education system, not dismiss it.

Now, if we talk about adults leaving their day jobs for social media or YouTube, there is a difference. For one, they have already passed from school and are much more independent than a teenager who is considering to drop out. Many people tend to look down on content creating and label it as a “fake job”. I believe that if something supports you economically and helps you earn money, it is a job. Social media is unstable and one isn’t going to be relevant forever. Also, those are more privileged and have more advantages are going to have a much more stable life if they quit their day jobs, so this is something which is not really for everyone. But, since the rules are different for adults and teens, one cannot really decide whether people quitting their day jobs for social media is right or not. 

I believe that if one chooses to pursue social media full time, they should have some other responsibilities or hobbies in their life. Having some other structure in your life can help you to avoid being stuck all day in the toxicity of social media, as it can get extremely negative. It is also important for them to have a backup plan, as internet fame can be fleeting, and while taking advantage of your online platform when it is thriving is great, one shouldn’t expect it to last forever and work on other things on the side.

Cowardice

Brave people are people who love to face challenges in life boldly. Victory comes to people who are bold enough to fight for it.

We come across many people who fear for each and everything in life. Most often it is because such people are not ready to take up challenge. We should realize that it takes a lot of courage to achieve great things in life.

We should never show cowardice in life. After all, Cowards die many times before their death. Our actions should prove our determination. We should set an example to others. Life is a competition where people who run fast win the race. So, we should throw away all our fears and get ready for the race.