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Keramat Ali Vs. Emperor

Keramat Ali vs Emperor

Type Court Judgment Court Kolkata Decided Jun 10, 1921
~2 min read
https://sooperkanoon.com/case/881069

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Citation
Court
Kolkata
Judge
Decided On
Subject
Contract

Case Summary

AI-generated summary - not the official court judgment text.

Legal Practitioners Act (XVIII of 1819), Sections 3, 36 - Tout, who is--Person who looks after cases and writes petitions, if tout. -

Key legal issue
Contract

Parties & Advocates

Appellant / Petitioner

Keramat Ali

Respondent

Emperor

Legal References

Reported In
62Ind.Cas.829

Excerpt

legal practitioners act (xviii of 1819), sections 3, 36 - tout, who is--person who looks after cases and writes petitions, if tout. - 1. this is a rule calling upon the deputy commissioner of cachar to show cause why his order, forbidding the petitioner to enter the precincts of the court as being a tout, should not be set aside.2. it does not appear that there were proper proceedings under section 36 of the legal practitioners act. the petitioner, however, was allowed to adduce evidence, and the question for consideration was whether he is tout.3. a tout is defined in section 3 of the legal practitioners act as meaning a person who procures the employment in any legal business of any legal practitioner in consideration of any remuneration moving from such practitioner, or proposes to a legal practitioner to procure his employment in any legal business in consideration of such remuneration. all that the evidence in the case shows, is that the petitioner looks after people's cases and writes petitions for them. we do not think that looking after people's cases and writing petitions for them makes one a tout. it must be proved that he procures the employment in any legal business of any legal practitioner in consideration of any remunsration moving from such practitioner in order that he may be declared a tout.4. we ought to mention that the learned senior government pleader could not support the order of the learned deputy commissioner.5. under the circumstances, the order must be set aside.

Full Judgment

1. This is a Rule calling upon the Deputy Commissioner of Cachar to show cause why his order, forbidding the petitioner to enter the precincts of the Court as being a tout, should not be set aside.

2. It does not appear that there were proper proceedings under Section 36 of the Legal Practitioners Act. The petitioner, however, was allowed to adduce evidence, and the question for consideration was whether he is tout.

3. A tout is defined in Section 3 of the Legal Practitioners Act as meaning a person who procures the employment in any legal business of any legal practitioner in consideration of any remuneration moving from such practitioner, or proposes to a legal practitioner to procure his employment in any legal business in consideration of such remuneration. All that the evidence in the case shows, is that the petitioner looks after people's cases and writes petitions for them. We do not think that looking after people's cases and writing petitions for them makes one a tout. It must be proved that he procures the employment in any legal business of any legal practitioner in consideration of any remunsration moving from such practitioner in order that he may be declared a tout.

4. We ought to mention that the learned Senior Government Pleader could not support the order of the learned Deputy Commissioner.

5. Under the circumstances, the order must be set aside.

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