Friday, August 31, 2012

DUTY SHOCKER

Fiat India loses 432cr excise case

Mayur Shetty TNN 


Mumbai: Fiat India has lost an almost decade-old battle with the excise department which had slapped a Rs 432 crore duty on the company for Uno cars sold below cost price between 1996 and 2001. 
    In a landmark judgment on August 29, Justice H L Dattu of the Supreme Court set aside the order passed by the Customs Excise and Service Tax Appellate Tribunal and restored the order by the adjudicating authority. 
    The excise department had discovered that the company was importing car kits in completely knocked down (CKD) and semi-knocked down condition and the cost of production of a single car was Rs 3,80,883 (CKD) and Rs 3,98,585 (SKD), respectively, against the assessable value of Rs 1,85,400. 
    Fiat India officials did not comment on the order. However, a source said that the order pertained to a dif
ferent Fiat company. The tax department’s contention was that cars were imported at a higher price but were sold at loss for a consideration — to penetrate the market, a fact confirmed by the company. 
    Arguing the case, Bishwajit Bhattacharyya, Additional Solicitor General of India, said the price at which the goods were sold by Fiat India clearly indicated that these goods were not “ordinarily sold” in 

terms of Section 4 (1) (a) of the Central Excise Act as the company had sold the cars at 100% loss for five years. “This judgment will bring about clarity and certainty in valuation under the central excise laws,” said Bhattacharyya. 
    The order will have wide implications as the tax department will now feel vindicated on its stand that the central excise duty is chargeable on manufacture or production of goods and not on the sale of goods.

Source::::: The Times of India, 31-08-2012, p.18.http://epaper.timesofindia.com/Default/Client.asp?Daily=TOIM&showST=true&login=default&pub=TOI&Enter=true&Skin=TOINEW

Hundreds of Indian students face deportation from UK

London Metropolitan Univ’s Licence Revoked For Visa Abuse

Ashis Ray TNN 


London: Hundreds of Indian students face deportation from UK after the British government on Thursday revoked London Metropolitan University’s (LMU) licence to teach and admit anybody from outside the European Union. The Indian High Commission on Thursday sent a diplomat to meet LMU officials to assess the situation while MP Keith Vaz sought quick clarification from its authorities. 
    More than 2,600 students from non-EU countries will be hit by the border agency’s step, and a large number of these are Indians. “We will support efforts to ensure those meeting current visa requirements can identify alternative places to study,” the British home office told TOI. Such students would have 60 days to find an alternative institution to absorb them or return home. 
    On Wednesday, the UK border agency said LMU, which has around 30,000 students, had “failed to address serious and systemic fail
ings” identified six months ago. A statement on the LMU website said the implications of the revocation are “hugely significant and far-reaching”. It added, “Our absolute priority is to our students, both current and prospective, and the university will meet all its obligations to them.” 
    A survey by the border agency revealed that over 26% of students there do not have valid visas to remain in 
Britain. Indians falling in this category are, therefore, likely to be asked to go back to India. In 40% of cases, adequate tests to determine competence in English wasn’t carried out, something that all UK universities are obliged to do. 
    “For the sake of this university and others, especially at this time of year, I hope the minister will urgently clarify the situation,” wrote Vaz, 
chairman of the home affairs select committee, to UK immigration minister Damian Green on Thursday. 
    Trouble is a number of less distinguished universities are struggling with their finances even after a threefold increase in tuition fee for domestic students. 
    Some of them are, consequently, attempting to balance their books with an indiscriminate intake and retention of foreign students, whether they are entitled to be so treated or not. 
    The UK’s National Union of Students contacted Prime Minister David Cameron to “express anger at the way decisions have been made in recent weeks and to reiterate the potentially catastrophic effects on higher education as a £12.5bn per year export industry for the UK”. 
    “The decision will create panic for students not just at London Met but also all around the country,” said union president Liam Burns, adding that the decision could have been limited to future students rather than existing ones.

BIG BLOW: Over 2,600 students from non-EU countries will be hit.
 

Thursday, August 30, 2012

GOING TECH-SAVVY

City colleges follow schools, take the smart class route

Shreya Bhandary TNN 


Mumbai: After schools, it’s time for colleges to open up to the tech boom and welcome smart classes on campuses. 
    While only a few colleges in the city are at present following the trend, the K C College management has decided to shift to smart classes by 2014, when the college will celebrate its diamond jubilee. 
    “We have always started a new feature on such events. We will make all our classes techsavvy for the celebrations,” said Manju Nichani, K C College principal. While KC Col
lege is the newest entrant to the club, a bunch of colleges in the city have already implemented the features in their classes. 
    At HR College, while all classes are equipped with computers, LCD screens and projectors, the computer lab is a smart class with interactive boards and Wi-Fi connectivity. “Whatever the teacher explains on her computer, reflects on students’ machines. Otherwise, smart classes are of little help as we don’t have a standardized syllabus,” said Indu Shahani, principal of HR College. 
    Recently, blackboards and chalks in all classes of Bandra’s St Andrew’s College were replaced with white boards and marker pens. “We are moving towards making our classes Wi-Fi equipped. Most of the smart class features are in place as students make presentations as part of their syllabus,” said Marie Fernandes, St Andrew’s College principal, adding that students will soon work on iPads in the their college.


Source::: The Times of India, 30-08-2012, p.07. http://epaper.timesofindia.com/Default/Client.asp?Daily=TOIM&showST=true&login=default&pub=TOI&Enter=true&Skin=TOINEW&AW=1346300214908
Issue of Library Readers Card:

All the bonafide students of the College are hereby informed to collect the Library Card / Ticket from the library. Please bring one photo and original fee receipt.

SC confirms death for Kasab, says he deserves nothing less

Upholds Acquittal Of Two Alleged Indian Plotters

Dhananjay Mahapatra TNN  (Source:: The Times of India, 30-08-2012, p.01)


New Delhi: The Supreme Court on Wednesday sent 26/11 Pakistani terrorist Ajmal Kasab to the gallows, finding him guilty of the Mumbai attacks which killed 166 people. Upholding the Bombay high court’s sentence on five counts, the apex court said the “enormity of the crime on all scales” left it with no other option. The Bombay high court had on February 22, 2011 upheld the death term awarded to Kasab by a trial court. 
    Focusing on the evidence that pointed to 26/11 being ha
tched in Pakistan and executed by a 10-member team trained by the Lashkar-e-Taiba, a bench of Justices Aftab Alam and C K Prasad said the conspiracy was vicious and ruthless. “In short, this is a case of terror from across the border. It has a magnitude of unprecedented enormity on all scales. The conspiracy was as deep and large as it was vicious. The preparation and training for the execution was as thorough as the execution was ruthless,” the SC said. 
    Refusing to show mercy to Kasab, the court said he behaved as if he was a patriot from Pakistan who was proud of what he had done. But the SC upheld the acquittal of alleged Indian plotters Fahim Ansari and Sabauddin Ahmed. 
 
'NO OPTION IN VIEW OF ENORMITY OF THE CRIME' 

The 2-judge SC bench, in a unanimous judgment, upheld the death penalty on five counts. It said: 
This is a case of terrorist attack from across the border. It has a magnitude of unprecedented enormity on all scales. The conspiracy was as deep and large as it was vicious. Preparation and training was as thorough as the execution was ruthless
In terms of loss of life and property, and more importantly in its traumatizing effect, this case stands alone, or it is at least the very rarest of rare to come before this court since the birth of the republic. It should attract the rarest of rare punishment 
The only mitigating factor is the appellant’s young age, but that is completely offset by the absence of any remorse on his part, or possibility of any reformation 

What next? Kasab can file a review petition which is mostly disposed of by judges in their chambers. He can seek clemency, from governor, then President 

Pending mercy petitions 
12 Convicts on death row 402 by end of 2010


Wednesday, August 29, 2012

How Apple chipped away at Samsung’s patent tactics
Turf war often degenerated into a bitter slanging match; ruling may reset competitive compass in the industry
Dan Levine & Poornima Gupta l San Francisco
In August 2010, just a few months after Samsung Electronics launched its Galaxy smartphone, a team of Apple Inc lawyers flew to South Korea.
Apple’s late co-founder, Steve Jobs, had already told Samsung executives at a meeting earlier that summer that he considered the Galaxy S, based on Google’s Android operating system, an illegal copy of the iPhone. But given the extensive business ties between the two companies — Samsung is one of Apple’s key component suppliers — a negotiated solution seemed most likely.
The Apple attorneys were blunt: “Android is designed to lead companies to imitate the iPhone product design and strategy,” read the second slide in their presentation.
But the meeting did not go well, according to a person familiar with the case. Samsung attorneys bristled at being accused of copying, and produced a set of their own patents that they said Apple was using without permission.
The meeting brought to the fore a fundamental disagreement between the two companies, and set the stage for a bitter, multi-country patent dispute that led to Friday’s US jury verdict that Samsung had violated Apple’s patents. The jury awarded Apple $1.05 billion in damages, which could be tripled as the jury found Samsung acted wilfully.
Samsung could now face a costly ban on sales of key smartphone and tablet products. Shares in Samsung — the world’s biggest technology firm by revenue — tumbled more than 7% on Monday, set for its biggest daily percentage drop in nearly four years, wiping $12 billion off its market value.
Samsung says it will seek to overturn the decision, and the worldwide patent battles among tech giants are hardly over. But for now at least the decision in what was widely seen as a critical case promises to re-set the competitive balance in the industry.
The vast majority of patent disputes settle before trial, particularly between competitors. In this case, though, the stakes were just too high -- and the two companies ultimately had very different views of the often murky legal issues.
Samsung believed its wireless communications patents were strong and valuable, and would serve as a counter-weight to any Apple showing of infringement, people close to the case say.
The South Korean company also didn’t believe Apple could or should be allowed to claim patent protection on design elements like the form of a rectangle, or the front flat surface embodied on the iPhone.
Apple, for its part, considered its feature and design patents to be very high up on the intellectual property food chain — and demonstrating their validity was critical to a much wider war against Android.
The two companies never came close to settling their differences, according to courtroom testimony, trial evidence and interviews with several sources close to the case.
And when it came to the trial, Samsung’s lawyers miscalculated in arguing that a verdict for Apple would harm competition in the marketplace. The jurors, led by a foreman who holds his own patent, were more persuaded by Apple’s pleas to protect innovation. For them, it ultimately wasn’t even a close call.
A spokesman for Samsung in Seoul had no immediate comment.
CORDIAL BUT ADAMANT
Apple launched the iPhone in 2007, revolutionising the mobile phone market. But later that year Google, then still an ally of Apple’s, unveiled the Open Handset Alliance, with the aim of distributing its Android smartphone software to all-comers.
Google’s open approach quickly caught on among manufacturers looking to compete with Apple. The strategy infuriated Jobs, and by 2009 relations between the two companies had soured and Google’s then-CEO, Eric Schmidt, left Apple’s board. Jobs’ biographer famously quotes him as accusing Google of “grand theft” and vowing to “go to thermonuclear war” over the issue.
In January 2010, Taiwanese phone manufacturer HTC Corp launched a touch screen, Android-based smartphone that sported features very similar to the iPhone. Apple sued in March of that year, and the Android smartphone patent wars were on.
HTC, though, was a minor player compared with Samsung.
After the cordial but failed August 2010 meeting, attorneys from Apple and Samsung talked in a series of meetings both in South Korea, California and elsewhere in the United States. Apple’s attorneys set to work putting a price tag on a royalty demand. By October 2010, they had concluded that Samsung should pay $24 per smartphone, and $32 per tablet. Based on Samsung’s own estimation of its profits, Apple’s royalty payments would effectively wipe out more than half of Samsung’s margins on any phone priced less than $450.
And, Apple’s offer wouldn’t have covered the “unique user experience” patents Apple holds dear. “We made that clear,” said Apple licensing chief Boris Teksler.
By the end of 2010, the meetings stopped as the two sides were too far apart.
VIEWED AS RIP-OFF
Apple hoped its relationship with Samsung would make filing an actual lawsuit unnecessary. Yet instead of wilting under Apple’s pressure, Samsung instead pressed its own patent claims, including a critical one relating to how mobile products send and receive information over wireless networks.
Samsung eventually would request a 2.4% royalty on those patents, or $14.40 per device.
But Samsung had committed to license its wireless patents on fair terms to competitors over the years, in exchange for the technology becoming part of the industry standard. Courts have generally been reluctant to bar companies from using such “standards essential” patents, and thus they are often less valuable than other types of intellectual property.
Then, in early 2011, Samsung released the Galaxy Tab 10.1. To Apple, it was a clear rip-off of the iPad, and showed Samsung had no intention of modifying its products.
Apple sued Samsung in a San Jose, California federal court in April 2011, saying the Korean company “slavishly” copied its designs. Samsung quickly counter sued, and the dispute bled into at least 10 courts around the world, including Australia and South Korea.
Over the next year, outside law firms hired by both companies racked up thousands of billable hours around the world, but no decisive rulings threatened either side. Jobs passed away in October 2011, and Cook carried on the litigation, filed “reluctantly,” he said.
Until recently it had mostly been a see-saw battle. Apple largely succeeded in thwarting HTC. But earlier this year a federal judge in Chicago threw out a case pitting Apple against Google’s Motorola Mobility unit, saying neither side could prove damages.
But barring a reversal on appeal, Apple now has a clear verdict: how it values its intellectual property is more than just a theory. Reuters.

Friday, August 24, 2012

Pay 5% VAT for flats bought from 2006-10

TIMES NEWS NETWORK 


Mumbai: Thousands of people who bought flats between 2006 and 2010 will have to pay value added tax (VAT) at the rate of 5% of the value with retrospective effect. On August 6, the state’s sales tax department issued a circular to developers saying VAT would be levied on flats, shops and bungalows sold by them between June 20, 2006 and March 31, 2010 . Several Mumbai-based developers said they would soon send VAT collection notices to such flat purchasers. 
 
    The new burden on a customer who bought a flat at Rs 50 lakh works out to a minimum of Rs 2.5 lakh. 
‘VAT on flat will hit buyers’ Mumbai: The state government intends to collect around Rs 1,000 crore from VAT on sale of flats for this four-year period. The Bombay HC recently rejected real estate developers’ appeal against the tax. MCHI-CREDAI and CREDAI-Pune Metro, which represented the developers, have now moved the SC with a special leave petition. 
 
    MCHI-CREDAI said each flat buyer in Maharashtra will have to pay up to 5% additional taxes for flat purchased by them along with interest at 15% per annum and penal interest at 25% that the state government is levying. Flat buyers are already reeling under the pressure of 3.09% service tax which has been implement
ed by the central government. Atul Puranik of the Centre for Fair Business Practices, said: “The cost of living is going up every day. The 5% VAT plus penal interest will further cripple the common man. We appeal to the government to scrap VAT on sale of flats altogether and give much-needed relief to the customer.’’ 
 
    The Maharashtra government had imposed 5% VAT on flat sales following the order of the Supreme Court in the case of K Raheja versus Karnataka government. Property experts said this led to an anomaly as the taxation system followed in Karnataka is totally different from the one prevailing in Maharashtra. “Unlike Maharashtra, Karnataka does not have the ‘Ownership of Flat Act’ and therefore developers in that state prepare two separate sets of documents—one for the share of land on which 
stamp duty is levied and another on construction on which no stamp duty is paid,’’ they said. The Maharashtra government subsequently reduced VAT on sale of flats to 1% from April 1, 2010.

Source:::: The Times of India, 24-08-2012, p.01. http://epaper.timesofindia.com/Default/Client.asp?Daily=TOIM&showST=true&login=default&pub=TOI&Enter=true&Skin=TOINEW

Tuesday, August 21, 2012


Now, get a new passport in 30 days

Prafulla Marpakwar TNN  (Source:::: The Times of India, 21-08-2012, p.05)


Mumbai: Citizens will no longer have to wait endlessly for their passports. The ministry of external affairs has fixed a time limit of 30 days for the issuance of new passports, 15 days for re-issue of passports and one to seven days for Tatkaal applications. 
    In addition to this, all regional passport offices have been directed to introduce walk-in facilities to smoothen the process submission of documents. The walk-in services cater to the needs of eight categories of passport applicants—senior citizens, physically-challenged persons, minors below 15 years whose parents hold valid passports, applicants for Tatkaal services (fresh/re-issue), issue of police clearance certificates (PCC), deletion of emigration check required 
(ECR) status in passports without any change of personal particulars, seeking new booklets in case of exhaustion of visa pages and central/state government servants, their spouses and dependent minor children who have no objection certificate/ identity certificate.
    The ministry’s directive comes after it was found that there was a huge delay in the issuance of passports owing to the increase in demand. “Though the police are supposed to submit their report after verifying the antece
dents of the applicant within 21 days, this was not happening. Many police verification reports were incomplete, mostly because applicants had not submitted all the information,” said a senior official. “The Centre has taken several measures for speedy delivery of passports. We have simplified the procedure and made it more citizenfriendly. Several touts, who operated outside regional passport offices, now have little to offer to citizens,” said the official. 
    Several passport seva centres have also been introduced across the country. “Our aim is to deliver all passport-related services to citizens in a timely, transparent, and reliable manner in a comfortable environment through streamlined processes,” the official added. “As many as 77 passport seva centres and a stateof-the-art multi-modal information and grievance handling system have been set up. We have also set up a central passport printing facility. Despite constraints, regional passport offices issued a record 74 lakh passports in 2011,” the official said. 

DELIVERING IT ON TIME 

The ministry of external affairs has fixed a time limit of 15 days for re-issuance of passports 
Tatkaal applications 
will be processed between 1-7 days 
All regional passport offi ces have been directed to introduce 
walk-in facilities 

    The walk-in services cater to the eight categories of applicants—senior citizens, physically-challenged persons, minors below 15 years whose parents hold valid passports, applicants for Tatkaal services (fresh/re-issue), issue of police clearance certificates, deletion of emigration check required status in passports without any change of personal particulars, seeking new booklets in case of exhaustion of visa pages and central/state government servants, their spouses and dependent minor children who have no objection certifi cate/identity certifi cate

MU to scrap rider on revaluation?
Proposal seeks that every student be given right to demand reassement of their papers
Kanchan Srivastava

Rajesh Sharma (name changed) is keeping his fingers crossed on a proposal to change the answer sheet revaluation criterion at the University of Mumbai (MU). The BCom student, who had secured just five marks in a paper this year, hopes that the rider to applying for revaluation — securing at least 20% of the total marks in a subject — will be done away with. 

The MU is considering the proposal to scrap such a bar and to allow even students who score a zero to apply for revaluation of their answer sheets. The proposal, mooted by Subhash Deo, director of examinations, MU, seeks that every student be given the right to demand revaluation of his/her paper and that there should be no cut-off mark to apply for it. As per an MU rule, a student needs to have at least 20% of the total score, or alternatively, 40% of the passing mark, to do so. 

This rule left thousands of students who failed to clear their paper with just one option: sit an examination again.
The MU has close to 6.5 lakh students, of which over a lakh apply for revaluation each year. Scrapping the condition on applying for reassessment is expected to help at least two lakh such students. Sharma wishes that the move had come a year earlier. “My friends who were eligible applied for revaluation and passed. I will have to sit the examination in October.” 

A college principal, however, feels that such a decision could backfire. “This could be a wrong move. I don’t know how the examination house will deal with the excess workload, which may rise multi-fold. It already struggles to meet the deadline for revaluation.” Another college principal says the MU should push the envelope instead. “It should actually raise the bar, as I have seen that most failed students pass after revaluation [of the answer sheets].”

Deo claims, “We have improved the assessment system this year and are going to make it better in future. If our evaluation is good, we don’t think students need to apply for revaluation. Moreover, we have set a deadline of September15 to clear all revaluation work of the March examination.”



Tuesday, August 14, 2012

Lawyer Licence Cancelled, HC Notice to Law College

Swati Deshpande TNN 


Mumbai: The Bombay high court on Monday heard a petition filed by a lawyer Mahendra Kawchale against the Bar Council of Maharashtra and Goa for cancelling his sanad in January 2012 and issued a notice to the UP university and the University Grants Commission (UGC). Kawchale’s counsel M P Vashi told a bench of Justices D YChandrachud and R D Dhanuka that the law degree of Kawchale was from the Bharatiya Shiksha Parishad, Uttar Pradesh, which he was awarded in 1995 after “validly completing three years of LLB”. The court posted the matter for further hearing on September 3. 
 
    The council’s former chairperson passed the order after a hearing, on January 17 to revoke the licence, holding that his degree on the basis of which he had obtained his sanad was forged. Kawchale was given letters by the UP college to show his degree was genuine and said the state bar council could not revoke the licence unless there was misconduct.


Source ::: The Times of India, 14-08-2012, p.05. http://epaper.timesofindia.com/Default/Client.asp?Daily=TOIM&showST=true&login=default&pub=TOI&Enter=true&Skin=TOINEW

Monday, August 13, 2012

Insurance Co to Pay 7L for Trashing Patient Claim

Rebecca Samervel TNN 


Mumbai: The Mumbai Suburban District Consumer Disputes Redressal Forum recently ordered The National Insurance Company Ltd to pay Rs 1.5 lakh compensation for wrongly repudiating the insurance claim of a Khar resident who underwent heart surgery in 2009. The complainant, Praveen Nischol, will also get the Rs 5.11 lakh he spent on the surgery. The company had rejected the claim on the ground that he was suffering from hypertension and diabetes before he took the mediclaim, but the discharge card proved it wrong. 
    Nischol had taken the mediclaim policy in 2007 and it was valid till October 2008. Since he was suffering from various aliments, on February 25, 2009, he was admitted to a hospital. After undergoing a surgery, he was dis
charged on March, 7, 2009. However, when he sent his claim form to the insurance company, it rejected it on the grounds of preexisting disease. After failing to get any relief from the Insurance Ombudsman, Nischol filed the complaint before the forum on April 12, 2010. 
    He also submitted various documents and his medical papers from the hospital. Among the documentary evidence, he presented his discharge card from the hospital where he underwent the surgery. The document stated that Nischol was suffering from diabetes and hyper
tension since January 2009. The forum held that since the insurance company had not submitted any documents to prove their version, the facts mentioned in the discharge card would be accepted. It further stated that the discharge card proved that Nischol was 
not suffering from any of the ailments when the insurance policy was procured in 2007. Holding the company guilty of deficiency in service, the forum also stated that Nischol had undergone surgery for the heart ailment and not for the other diseases.


Source :::: The Times of India, 13-08-2012, p.06.  http://epaper.timesofindia.com/Default/Client.asp?Daily=TOIM&showST=true&login=default&pub=TOI&Enter=true&Skin=TOINEW&AW=1344833747352

Monday, August 6, 2012


वर्षात पदवी ही 'पदवी'च नाही!


एका वर्षात बी . ए . अथवा बी . कॉम . होण्याचे आमीष दाखविणाऱ्या विद्यापीठांच्या जाहिराती अनेक ठिकाणी दिसून येतात . मात्र , विद्यापीठ अनुदान आयोगाच्या ( युजीसी ) नियमानुसार पहिली पदवी ही तीन वर्षाच्या अभ्यासक्रमानेच मिळविणे आवश्यक असल्याने एक वर्षात पदवीधर होणारे ' युजीसी ' च्या २००३च्या सुधारित नियमानुसार पदवीधरच नसल्याची धक्कादायक बाब मुंबई हायकोर्टापुढे आलेल्या एका प्रकरणामुळे उजेडात आली आहे . यामुळे अशाप्रकारे कथित विद्यापीठाच्या पदव्या घेणारे विद्यार्थी अडचणीत येण्याची शक्यता आहे .

विनोथन कृष्णन रामन या विद्यार्थ्याचे प्रकरण हायकोर्टाचे न्या . धनंजय चंद्रचूड व न्या . आर . डी . धानुका यांच्या खंडपीठापुढे सुनावणीला आले होते . या विद्यार्थ्याने १९८७ मध्ये मुंबई विद्यापीठातून बी . कॉम . पदवी घेतली होती . त्यात त्याला ४१ . ८८ टक्के गुण मिळाले होते . त्यानंतर त्याने अण्णामलाई विद्यापीठातून एका वर्षात बी . ए . पदवी घेतली . त्या पदवी परीक्षेतील चांगल्या गुणांच्या आधारे त्याने मुंबई विद्यापीठाच्या एम . ए . पदवीसाठी अर्ज केला होता . मात्र , ती पदवी पूर्ण करण्याऐवजी त्याने ठाण्याच्या लॉ कॉलेजमधून एल . एल . बी . साठी प्रवेश घेतला . तो अभ्यासक्रम अर्धवट ठेवून त्याने एम . ए . ची पदवी पूर्ण केली व पुन्हा एल . एल . बी . चा अभ्यासक्रम चालू केला . तथा ​ पि प्रथम वर्ष एल . एल . बी . परीक्षेच्यावेळी त्याला अडवण्यात आल्याने त्याने हायकोर्टात धाव घेतली . त्यात त्याची बी . ए . ही पदवी एल . एल . बी . साठी पात्र नसल्याचे स्पष्ट करण्यात आले . बार कौन्सिलच्या अटीनुसार एल . एल . बी . साठी किमान ४५ टक्के गुण आवश्यक असल्यानेही व पहिल्या बी . कॉम . च्या पदवीत ४१ . ८२ टक्के गुण असल्याने तो एल . एल . बी . परीक्षेसाठी अपात्र ठरत होता .

या संदर्भात युजीसीने केलेल्या प्रतिज्ञापत्रातून काही मुद्दे पुढे आले . युजीसीच्या १९८५च्या नियमानुसार पहिल्या पदवीसाठी विद्यार्थ्याने किमान तीन वर्षांचे शिक्षण घेणे बंधनकारक असल्याचे स्पष्ट करण्यात आले होते . मात्र , त्यात ३० जून , १९९९ मध्ये दुरुस्ती करण्यात येऊन एक वर्षात पदवी घेणाऱ्या व्यक्तीलाही पात्र ठर ​ विण्यात आले होते .

त्यामध्ये पुन्हा २००३ मध्ये बदल करण्यात येऊन पहिल्या पदवीसाठी तीन वर्षे शिक्षण पूर्ण केल्याचे बंधन ठेवण्यात आले आहे . त्यामुळे युजीसीचा हा नियम व बार कौन्सिलची ४५ टक्के गुणांची अट यात हा विद्यार्थी बसत नसल्याचे उघड झाले . तथापि त्याने एम . ए . पदवी घेतली असल्याने त्याचा विचार करून मुंबई विद्यापीठाने एका आठवड्यात त्याची बाजू ऐकून त्यानंतर एक आठवड्यात निकाल द्यावा , असा आदेश हायकोर्टाने दिला आहे . 



Source::: Maharashtra Times, 06-08-2012, p.03, http://maharashtratimes.indiatimes.com/articleshow/15369915.cms