Tuesday, November 1, 2016

JURISPRUDENCE – UNIT IV – RIGHTS, PERSONS AND LIABILITIES

SASI K.G.

01. Meaning and Classification of Legal Rights and Duties

 Legal rights are, clearly, rights which exist under the rules of legal systems or by virtue of decisions of suitably authoritative bodies within them.

According to positivists, legal rights are essentially those interests which have been legally recognized and protected. John Austin made a distinction between legal rights and other types of rights such as Natural rights or Moral rights. By legal rights, he meant rights which are creatures of law, strictly or simply so called. He said that other kind of rights are not armed with legal sanction and cannot be enforced judicially.
On the other hand, Salmond said that a legal right is an interest recognized and protected by rule of law and violation of such an interest would be a legal wrong. Salmond further said that:
1. A legal duty is an act that obliges to do something and act, the opposite of which would be a legal wrong.
2. Whenever law ascribes duty to a person, a corresponding right also exists with the person on whom the duty is imposed.
3. There are two kinds of duties: Moral Duty and Legal Duty.
4. Rights are said to be the benefits secured for persons by rules regulating relationships.
Salmond also believed that no right can exist without a corresponding duty. Every right or duty involves a bond of legal obligation by which two or more persons are bound together. Thus, there can be no duty unless there is someone to whom it is due; there can be no right unless is someone from whom it is claimed; and there can be no wrong unless there is someone who is wronged, that is to say, someone whose right has been violated.
This is also called as vinculum juris which means “a bond of the law”. It is a tie that legally binds one person to another.
On the other hand, Austin said that Duties can be of two types:
a. Relative Duty – There is a corresponding right existing in such duties.
b. Absolute Duty – There is no corresponding right existing.
Austin conceives this distinction to be the essence of a right that it should be vested in some determinate person and be enforceable by some form of legal process instituted by him. Austin thus starts from the assumption that a right cannot vest in an indeterminate, or a vague entity like the society or the people. The second assumption with which Austin starts is that sovereign creates rights and can impose or change these rights at its will. Consequently, the sovereign cannot be the holder of such rights.
According to Salmond, there are five important characteristics of a Legal Rigt:
1. It is vested in a person who may be distinguished as the owner of the right, the subject of it, the person entitled, or the person of inherence.
2. It avails against a person, upon whom lies the correlative duty. He may be distinguished as the person bound, or as the subject of duty, or as the person of incidence.
3. It obliges the person bound to an act or omission in favour of the person entitled. This may be termed the content of the right.
4. The act or omission relates to something (in the widest sense of that word), which may be termed the object or subject matter of the right.
5. Every legal right has a title, that is to say, certain facts or events by reason of which the right has become vested in its owner.
Some jurists hold that a right may not necessarily have a correlative duty. They say that legal rights are legal concepts and these legal concepts have their correlatives which may not necessarily be a duty.
Roscoe Pound also gave an analysis of such legal conceptions. He believed that legal rights are essentially interests recognized and administered by law and belong to the ‘science of law’ instead of ‘law’. He proposed that such Rights are conceptions by which interests are given form in order to secure a legal order.

02. Theories of Legal Rights and Duties

01. Salmond on Rights and Duties

Salmond said that a perfect right is one which corresponds to a perfect duty and a perfect duty is one which is not merely recognized by law but also enforced by law. In a fully developed legal system, there are rights and duties which though recognized by law are not perfect in nature. The rights and duties are important but no action is taken for enforcing these rights and duties. The rights form a good ground for defence but duties do not form a good ground for action. However, in some cases, an imperfect right is sufficient to enforce equity.
Salmond gave following classifications of rights.
1. Positive and Negative Rights
2. Real and Personal Rights
3. Right in rem and right in personam
4. Proprietary and Personal Rights
5. Inheritable and Uninheritable Rights

02. Salmond’s Classification of Positive and Negative Rights


Positive Rights
Negative Rights
1
A positive right corresponds to a corresponding duty and entitles its owners to have something done for him without the performance of which his enjoyment of the right is imperfect.
Negative rights have negative duties corresponding to them and enjoyment is complete unless interference takes place. Therefore, majority of negative rights are against the entire world.
2
In the case of positive rights, the person subject to the duty is bound to do something.
Whereas, in case of negative rights, others are restrained to do something.
3
The satisfaction of a positive right results in the betterment of the position of the owner.
Whereas in case of a negative right, the position of the owner is maintained as it is.
4
In case of positive rights, the relation between subject and object is mediate and object is attained with the help of others.
Whereas in case of negative rights, the relation is immediate, there is no necessity of outside help. All that is required is that others should refrain from interfering case of negative rights.
5
In case of positive rights, a duty is imposed on one or few individuals.
In case of negative rights, the duty is imposed on a large number of persons.

03. Salmond’s Classification of Real and Personal Rights


Real Rights
Personal Rights
1
A real right corresponds to a duty imposed upon persons in general.
A personal right corresponds to a duty imposed upon determinate individuals.
2
A real right is available against the whole world.
A personal right is available only against a particular person.
3
All real rights are negative rights. Therefore, a real right is nothing more than a right to be left alone by others. It is merely a right to their passive non-interference.
Most personal rights are positive rights although in a few exceptional cases they are negative.

In real right, the relation is to a thing. Real rights are derived from some special relation to the object.
In personal right, it is the relation to other persons who owe the duties which is important. Personal rights are derived from special relation to the individual or individuals under the duty.
4
Real rights are right in rem.
Personal rights are right in personam.

04. Salmond’s Classification of Right in rem and Right in personam


Right in rem
Right in personam

1
It is derived from the Roman term ‘actio in rem’. An action in rem was an action for the recovery of dominium.
It is derived from the Roman term ‘action in personam’. An action in personam was one for the enforcement of obligato i.e. obligation.

2
The right protected by an action in rem came to be called jus in rem.
A right protected by action in personam came to be called as jus in personam.

3
Jus in rem means a right against or in respect of a thing.
Jus in personam means a right against or in respect of a person.

4
A right in rem is available against the whole world.
A right in personam is available against a particular individual only.

05. Salmond’s Classification of Proprietary and Personal Rights


Proprietary Rights
Personal Rights
1
Proprietary rights means a person’s right in relation to his own property. Proprietary rights have some economic or monetary value.
Personal rights are rights arising out of any contractual obligation or rights that relate to status.
2
Proprietary rights are valuable.
Personal rights are not valuable.
3
Proprietary rights are not residual in character.
Personal rights are the residuary rights which remain after proprietary rights have been subtracted.
4
Proprietary rights are transferable.
Personal rights are not transferable.
5
Proprietary rights are the elements of wealth for man.
Personal rights are merely elements of his well-being.
6
Proprietary rights possess not merely judicial but also economic importance.
Personal rights possess merely judicial importance.

06. Salmond’s Classification of Inheritable and Uninheritable Rights

Inheritable Rights
Uninheritable Rights
A right is inheritable if it survives the owner.
A right is uninheritable if it dies with the owner.

07. Relation between Rights and Duties

1. Rights and Duties always go together:
Rights and duties are closely related and cannot be separated from one another. Both go side by side. These are the two sides of the same coin. If the state gives the right to life to a citizen, it also imposes an obligation on him to not to expose his life to dangers, as well as to respect the life of others. If I have a right to work and earn, it is also my duty to recognize the same right of others.
2. Right of One is the Duty of Others:
Rights can be enjoyed only in the world of duties. For every right there is corresponding duty. When the people fail to discharge their duties properly, the rights all become meaningless. “I can enjoy my rights only if the others allow me to do the same. I have” the right to life and it is the duty of others to respect my life and not to cause any harm to me.”
3. Rights of a Citizen also implies Duties for him:
Rights are not the monopoly of a single individual. Everybody gets these equally. This means that “others also have the same rights which I have, and it is my duty to see that others also enjoy their rights.” Laski has rightly said that one man’s right is also his duty. It is my duty to respect the rights of others as well as the duty to use my rights in the interest of society.
4. Rights are to be used for Social Good:
Rights originate in society. Therefore, while enjoying rights, we must always try to promote social interest. It is the duty of every one of us to use our rights for promoting the welfare of the society as a whole.
5. Duty towards the State:
Since state protects and enforces rights, it also becomes the duty of all citizens to be loyal to the state. It is their duty to obey the laws of the state and to pay taxes honestly. Citizens should always be ready to defend the state. Thus a citizen has both Rights and Duties. He enjoys rights and performs his duties. Rights and Duties are the two sides of the same coin.

03. Correlation between Rights and Duties

Rights and duties that acquire a functional nature in such context are characterized in a tentative formal way. A possible connection between functional rights and duties and the issue of morality as a regulation mechanism. Every right has a corresponding duty. Therefore,, there can be no duty unless there is someone to whom it is due. There can be no right without a corresponding duty or a duty without a corresponding right, just as there cannot be parent without a child. . Every duty is a duty towards some person or persons in whom a corresponding right is vested

01. Relationship between Rights and Duties

It is debatable question whether rights and duties are necessarily co relative. According to one view, every right has a corresponding duty. Therefore,, there can be no duty unless there is someone to whom it is due. There can be no right without a corresponding duty or a duty without a corresponding right, just as there cannot be parent without a child. Every duty is a duty towards some person or persons in whom a corresponding right is vested. Likewise, every right is right against some person or persons upon whom a co relative duty is imposed. Every right or duty involves a vinculum juris or a bond of legal obligation by which two or more persons are bound together. There can be no duty unless there is someone to whom it is due. Likewise, there can be no right unless there is someone from whom it is claimed.[i]
According to Holland, every right implies the active or passive forbearance by others of the wishes of the party having the right. The forbearance on the part of others is called a duty. A moral duty is that which is demanded by the public opinion of society and a legal duty is that which is enforced by the power of the state.
The view of Salmond is that rights and duties are co relatives. If there are are duties towards the public, there are rights as well. There can be no duty unless there is some person to whom that duty is due. Every right or duty involves a bond of obligation.

02. Minerva mills ltd v. union of India

The Supreme Court observed that there may be a rule which imposes an obligation on an individual or authority, and yet it may not be enforceable in court of law, and therefore not give rise to a corresponding enforceable right in another person. But it would still be a legal rule because it prescribes a norm of conduct to be followed by such individual or authority. The law may provide a mechanism for enforcement of this obligation, but the existence of the obligation does not depend upon the creation of such mechanism. The obligation exists prior to and independent of, the mechanism of enforcement. A rule of law because there is no regular judicial or quasi-judicial machinery to enforce its command. Such a rule would exist despite any problem relating to its enforcement.[ii]
Rights and duties are two phases of the same thing. Rights are considered to be essential for the expansion of human personality. They offer to the individual a sufficient scope for free action and thus prepare ground for self-development.
Although rights arc of great significance in a democratic stale yet they become meaningless in the absence of duties. Rights involve obligations as well.
An individual has rights so that he may make his contribution to the social good. One has no right to act unsocially, man’s rights imply his claims on society and duties indicate the claim of society on the individual. This means that an individual owes to the society certain duties as he obtains rights.

03. four-fold connection between rights and duties

According to Prof. Laski there is a four-fold connection between rights and duties.
1. My Right implies Your Duty:
Every right of an individual involves a corresponding duty of others. For example, my right to life implies that others should give protection and security to my life.
My right to move about freely implies a corresponding duty resting on others that they should not interfere with my free movement.
2. My Rights imply My Duty to admit a similar Right of others:
The conditions of life which I need for myself arc also needed by others. This indicates that every right is a duty in itself. If an individual exercises a right, he must bear in mind that the same right belongs to others as well.
If I have the right to freedom of speech, it is my duty to see that I may not be a hindrance in the free exercise of this right by others.
3.I should exercise My Right to promote Social Good:
A person He guarantees the rights to the majority in the society to remove the should not abuse the right given to him by the State.
For example, if he uses the right to freedom of speech for spreading communal bitterness or society cannot deprive man of these rights; these are inherent and to preach violence and anarchy, it becomes an act counter to the social alienable rights, good. The state will then be justified in depriving the person of his right if he has abused it.
4. Since the State guarantees and maintains My Rights, I have the Duty to support the State:
The state is the agency for social good and it is the duty of an individual to perform ones duties honestly.
The above-mentioned relations between rights and duties, there for clearly prove that rights and duties go hand in hand. A healthy civic li] is impossible without the co-existence of rights and duties. Rights without duties have no meaning and duties without rights have no sense.[iii]

04. Constitutional Provisions

The Indian Constitution is one of the largest written Constitutions, drafted after the path breaking and epoch-making French Revolution, American Revolution and Russian Revolution. It also came after Industrial revolution in Europe, the Liberal Thinkers and their Ideas. And it had been framed long after the Unification of the German and Italian Nations by Bismarck and Garibaldi. Therefore, every Progressive and Noble Thoughts of the World have been adopted and built into Indian Constitution. And in the words of Baba Saheb, framer of the Constitution – not to do so would have only been irrational. The Indian Constitution, naturally had derived a lot from the unwritten British Constitution. It had adopted the British Parliamentary System, British Legal System and Principles of Administration. And it had also incorporated many main Provisions drawn from various Govt of India Acts made by the Imperial British for India and Indian People, and to the British Colonial Govt in India for its Governance. Those were only to be expected.
The Rights Freedoms and Duties of the Individuals, as Citizens of the Country, had been built into the Constitution in various Parts Chapters and Articles. It will be a Study of the whole Constitution, all the Parts, Articles and Schedules, if we are to talk of all the Rights and Duties. For almost all the Articles and Provisions such as the Preamble and Schedule hold many promises and hopes to the Citizens, and even to other Individuals. Some of the Rights are specific and special for specified segments of the Society, otherwise marginalised discriminated exploited and suppressed. These are specifically in addition, and apart from those clearly laid out, as the Rights and Duties of all Citizens.
The Rights one can derive, depends upon the way the People or Individual agitate demand legislate and govern themselves, before the authorities, the political parties, elected peoples representatives, in the Legislatives and Parliament, before the political executives in the Government, and ultimately before the Government and Courts. However, the significant and apparently clear Rights and Duties are, specifically discussed below.
Fundamental Rights
The Constitution has been made by Indians for Indians and their Government. Sovereignty of the Nation lies with the People. In fact it is the People, who give the Rights to others, to all Institutions public and private, every individual in the Country – Citizens or not, and to themselves. The People also provide the Directions to the Government, the Political Parties and their Members, who come forward to represent them, and help Govern the Nation.
The Rights start from the Right to –
1. Citizenship of the Country
2. The hopes and expectations that flow from Part IV Directive Principles of State Policy
However, the Constitution Part IV on Directive Principles of State Policy, is only a Directive and guideline for the State, Parliament and Legislatives, Political Executives, government, the bureaucracy and planners, and to the people. The directive principles of state policy, do not give any direct rights and powers to the individuals. People cannot, in the normal circumstances go to courts to demand any of the directive principles of state policy, as their Rights or Dues, or ask the Courts to enforce them.
Apart from these there are specific Fundamental Rights. They are large, specific, significant, essential and important to any Citizen in any part of the Country. In fact, most of these are needed by any Citizen of any Nation living in any part of the World.
The Fundamental Rights are contained in exclusive Part III of the Constitution. They are the –
1. Right to Equality – Articles 14, 15, 16, 17 and 18
2. Right to Freedom – Articles 19 to 22
3. Right against Exploitation – Articles 23 and 24
4. Right to Freedom of Religion – Articles 25 to 28
5. Cultural and Educational Rights – Articles 29 and 30
6. Right to Constitutional Remedies – Articles 32 to 35
Right to Property and the concerned Article 31 relating to Compulsory acquisition of property was omitted and repealed by the Constitution (Forty-fourth Amendment) Act 1978.
Saving of Certain Laws, with related Articles 31A to 31 D were added by various Constitutional Amendments. However, Article 31 D Saving of Laws in respect of Anti-National Activities was subsequently repealed by the Constitutional (Forty-third Amendment) Act of 1977.
Rights have no meaning at all, unless one can force those others, or authorities or the Government to give the Rights being denied, withheld or delayed, deliberately or otherwise, to yield and give the rights. Or one should be able ask or force the Govt and other authorities to intervene, and ensure or force those who are denying, withholding or standing in the way of the Rights, discipline them, and get the Rights. Hence, the Constitution provides, vide Article 32, remedies for enforcement of Rights conferred by this Part. This Article 32, in fact is the most important provision of the Constitution, forming part of Part III on Fundamental Rights. It provides every Citizen and every individual, the Right to move the Supreme Court by appropriate proceedings for the enforcement of the Rights.
Others are –
1. under the Right to Equality,
a) Article 14 provides the Right of EQUALITY BEFORE LAW
b) Article 15 provides rights for prohibition of discrimination on grounds of religion, race, caste, sex or place of birth
C) Article 16 gives the right to equality of opportunity in matters of public employment
D) Article 17 deals with rights associated with the abolition of untouchability, and
E) Article 18 deals with rights associated with the abolition of titles
2. under the Right to Freedom,
a) Article 19 on PROTECTION OF CERTAIN RIGHTS REGARDING FREEDOM OF SPEECH etc, it is said that,
(1) All citizens shall have the right –
(a) To freedom of speech and expression
(b) To assemble peaceably and without arms
(c) To form association or unions
(d) To move freely throughout the territory of India
(e) To reside and settle in any part of the territory of,
(f) To practice any profession, or to carry on any occupation, trade or business
At the same-time vide part (2) of the same Article 19, the Constitution allows the Operation of any existing law, permits the States to make any law to impose restrictions on the above rights, that can be considered as reasonable.
b) Article 20 gives the Rights of PROTECTION IN RESPECT OF CONVICTION FOR OFFENCES, in some unfair or unjust manner
c) Article 21 gives the Rights of PROTECTION OF LIFE AND PERSONAL LIBERTY
d) Article 22 gives the Rights for PROTECTION AGAINST ARREST AND DETENTION IN CERTAIN CASES, in some unfair and unjust manner
3. under the Rights against Exploitation,
a) Article 23 deals with PROHIBITION OF TRAFFIC IN HUMAN BEINGS AND FORCED LABOUR
b) Article 24 deals with PROHIBITION OF EMPLOYMENT OF CHILDREN IN FACTORIES, etc
4. Right to Freedom of Religion – Articles 25 to 28
5. Cultural and Educational Rights – Articles 29 and 30
6. Right to Constitutional Remedies – Articles 32 to 35

05. Duties of Individuals

The Duties of individual Citizens of India have been laid out in Article 51A, Part IVA of the Constitution, as Fundamental Duties. These were not there in the Original version of the Constitution framed and adopted by the Constituent Assembly. These were inserted by the Constitution (Forty-second Amendment) Act passed by the Parliament in 1976. –

06. Fundamental Rights

It shall be the duty of every citizen of India –
a) To abide by the Constitution and respect its ideals and institutions, the National Flag and National Anthem;
b) To cherish and follow the noble ideals which inspired our National Struggle for Freedom;
c) To uphold and protect the sovereignty, unity and integrity of India;
d) To defend the Country and render National Service when called upon to do so;
e) to promote harmony and the spirit of common brotherhood amongst all the people of India transcending religious, linguistic and regional or sectional diversities; to renounce practices derogatory to the dignity of women;
f) To value and preserve the rich heritage of our composite culture;
g) To protect and improve the natural environment including forests, lakes, rivers and wild life, and to have compassion for living creatures;
h) To develop the scientific temper, humanism and the spirit of inquiry and reform;
i) To safeguard public property and to abjure violence;
j) To strive towards excellence in all spheres of individual and collective activity so that the Nation constantly rises to higher levels of endeavour and achievement.
All Rights and Duties always remain as silent Provisions interned in the Constitution. It is unto the People to realise them. They have to make the Government to work, and ensure that they do their Duties and they get their Rights. Where necessary they have to fight for them, go to the Courts to agitate for them, and struggle in the Society to retain them. As Baba Saheb said, in his last speech in the Constituent assembly on 25thNovember 1949, while moving the Draft Constitution for adoption, the success or effectiveness of any Law and Constitution depends upon those who work them.[iv]

04. Rights in a Wider Sense: Hohfeld’s Analysis

01. Four Types of Rights

The following list enumerates Hohfeld’s basic schema, identifying each kind of right and the correlative legal consequence. P is the party with the right. Q represents the person or group of persons on whom the right has a legal effect. X represents the object of the right.
Claim Rights
Rights relation: P has a claim against Q to X.
Correlative relation: Q has a duty to P to X.
Liberty Rights
Rights relation: P has a liberty against Q to X.
Correlative relation: Q has no claim against P to not-X
Authority Rights:
Rights relation: P has authority over Q to X
Correlative relation: Q has a liability to P to X.
Immunity Rights
Rights relation: P has an immunity against Q to X.
Correlative relation: Q has a disability (no authority) against P to not-X.

02. Moral and Legal Rights

Hohfeld was interested in legal rights, but we can extend his scheme to moral rights. Thus, if I have a moral claim right to performance of a promise, you have a corresponding moral duty to perform. Of course, many legal rights are identical to (or substantially the same as) similar moral rights. Contracts, for example, create both moral and legal obligations. Some moral rights, however, may not be reflected in the law. For example, I may have a moral obligation not to discriminate on the basis of race when letting a room in my home, but at the same time have a legal liberty right to engage in such discrimination.

03. Hohfeld’s System of Fundamental Legal Concepts or Jural Relations


1
2
3
4

Jural Opposites
Right
No Right
Privilege 
Duty
Power
– 
Disability
Immunity 
Liability
Jural Correlatives
Right
Duty
Privilege
 –
No Right
Power
– 
 Liability
Immunity 
 – 
Disability
Jural Correlatives represent the presence of in another. Thus, right is the presence of duty in another and liability is the presence of power in another.
Jural Opposites represent the absence of in oneself. Thus, no right is the absence of right in oneself and disability is the absence of power in oneself.

04. Conclusion derived from Hohfeld’s System

a. As a person’s right is an expression of a wish that the other person against whom the right or claim is expressed has a duty to obey his right or claim.
b. A person’s freedom is an expression of a right that he may do something against other person to change his legal position.
c. A person’s power is an expression of a right that he can alter other person’s legal position.
d. A person’s disability is an expression of a wish that another person must not alter the person’s legal position.

05. Definition and Nature of Personality

01. Definition of ‘Person

The term ‘person’ is derived from the Latin term ‘Persona’ which means those who are recognized by law as being capable of having legal rights and being bound by legal duties. It means both- a human being, a body of persons or a corporation or other legal entity that is recognized by law as the subject of rights and duties.
Savingy has defined person as the subject or bearer of right. But Holland has criticised this definition on the ground that persons are not subject to right alone but also duties. He says: the right not only resides in, but is also available against persons. There are persons of incidence as well as of inherence.
Kelson rejected the definition of personality as an entity which has rights and duties. He has also rejected the distinction between human beings as natural persons and juristic persons. He says the totality of rights and duties is the personality; there is no entity distinct from them. However, Kelson’s view has been criticised for the reason that in law natural person is different from legal persons who are also capable of having rights and duties and constitute a distinct entity.
Salmond’s definition seems to be more correct than the earlier definitions. In the words of Salmond: “So far as legal theory is concerned, a person is any being whom the law regards as capable of rights and duties. Any being that is so capable is a person, whether a human being or not, and no being that is not so capable is a person even though he be a man.”
Salmond further explains that the extension of the conception of personality beyond the class of human beings is one of the most noteworthy achievements of the legal imagination.
Persons can be classified into (a) natural person, and (b) legal or artificial or juristic person. There are some natural persons who do not enjoy the status of legal persons and vice versa.

02. Meaning of Natural Person

A natural person is legally defined as a living human being. A natural person is a being, to whom the law attributes personality in accordance with reality and truth. Natural person is a human being who is regarded by law as having rights and being bound by duties. A human being must satisfy two conditions in order to be a natural person in law, namely, he must be a living human being and he must be recognized by the state as person so he must not be a slave in the absolute control of his master or otherwise civilly dead as a monk who has renounced the world.

03. Meaning of ‘Legal Person’

The word person is derived from the Latin word ‘persona’. Used in the context of law, persona came to signify the subject of legal rights and duties. It came to denote not an individual litigant as a human being, but anybody or anything permitted to assert legal claims or subjected to legal duties. From the legal perspective, the mask of personality does not, therefore, necessarily have to be worn by human beings.
Legal personality may be said to refer to the particular device by which law creates, or recognizes units to which it ascribes certain powers and capacities. Persons are the substances of which the rights and duties are the attributes. It is in this respect that persons possess judicial significance.

04. Natural Person vis-a vis Legal Person

Legal persons are those which are the creations of law e.g. the company, corporations, trade unions, etc.  Salmond says legal person is any subject matter other than human beings to which the law attributes legal personality. Generally, legal personality is granted by law to all human beings, legal personality being an artificial creation of the law may be conferred on entities other than individual human beings. The law, in creating legal persons, always does so by personifying some real thing. Following are the differences between natural person and legal person:
1.     A natural person is a human being and is a real and living person.
2.     He has characteristics of the power of thought speech and choice.
3.     Unborn, dead man and lower animals are not considered as natural persons.
4.     The layman does not recognize idiot, company, corporation, idol etc. as persons.
5.     He is also a legal person and accordingly perform their functions
6.     Natural person can live for a limited period. i.e. he cannot live more than 100 years.
1.     Legal person is being, real or imaginary whom the law regards as capable of rights or duties.
2.     Legal persons are also termed “fictitious”, “juristic”, “artificial” or “moral”.
3.     In law, idiots, dead men, unborn persons, corporations, companies, idols, etc. are treated as legal persons.
4.     The legal persons perform their functions through natural persons only.
5.     There are different varieties of legal persons, viz. Corporations, Companies, Universities, President, Societies, Municipalities, Gram  panchayats, etc.
6.     Legal person can live more than 100 years. Example: (a) the post of “American President” is a corporation, which was created some three hundred years ago, and still it is continuing. (b) “East India Company” was established in sixteenth century in London, and now still is in existence.

06. Legal Status of Unborn Children, Minor, Lunatic, Drunk and Dead Person

01. Law of Status

Law of status is the law concerning the natural, the domestic and the extra domestic status of man in civilized society. The law of extra domestic status is the law that is concerned with matters and relations apart from those concerning the family. Thus this department of the law of status deals with the status of persons such as lunatics, aliens, deceased persons, lower animals etc.
These are persons who do not enjoy the status of legal personality but the society has some duties towards them.

02. Legal Status of Unborn Person

A child in mother’s womb is by legal fiction regarded as already born. If he is born alive, he will have a legal status. Though law normally takes cognizance of living human beings yet the law makes an exception in case of an infant in ventre sa mere.
Under English Law, a child in the womb of the mother is treated as in existence and property can be vested in its name. Article 906 of the French Civil Code permits the transfer of property in favour of an unborn person. But, according to Mohammedan Law a gift to a person not in existence is void. A child in the womb of the mother is considered to be a person both under the law of crimes and law of torts.
Indian Position - Under section 13 of the Transfer of Property Act, property can be transferred for the benefit of an unborn person by way of trust. Similarly section 114 of the Indian Succession Act, 1925 provides for the creation of prior interest before the unborn person may be made the owner of property – corporeal or incorporeal, but no property will be deemed to be vested in the unborn person unless and until he is born alive. In Hindu Law also a child in the womb of the mother is deemed to be in existence for certain purposes. Under Mitakshara law, such a child has interest in coparcenary property.
Under section 315 of the Indian Penal Code, the infliction of pre natal injury on a child, which is capable of being born alive and which prevents it from being so could amount to an offence of child destruction. Section 416 of Criminal Procedure Code provides that if a woman sentenced to death is found to be pregnant, the High Court shall order the execution of the sentence to be postponed, and may if it thinks fit, commute the sentence to imprisonment for life. It has been held that in a Canadian case that a child could succeed in tort after it was born on account of a deformity which was held to have been caused by a negligent pre natal injury to mother.
Though there is no Indian case on this point but it is expected that a liberal view would be taken on this line and a child would be getting the right to sue. In an African case it was held that a child can succeed in tort after it is born on account of a deformity caused by pre injury to his mother.
In India as well in England, under the law of tort an infant cannot maintain an action for injuries sustained while on ventre sa mere. However, in England damages can be recovered under Fatal Accidents Act, 1846 for the benefit of a posthumous child. In short, it can be concluded that an unborn person is endowed with legal personality for certain purposes.

03. Legal Status of Dead Man

Dead man is not a legal person. As soon as a man dies he ceases to have a legal personality. Dead men do not remain as bearers of rights and duties it is said that they have laid down their rights and duties with their death. Action personalis moritur cum persona- action dies with the death of a man. With death personality comes to an end. A dead man ceases to have any legal right or bound by any legal duty. Yet, law to some extent, recognises and takes account of the desires or intentions of a deceased person. Law ensures a decent burial, it respects the wishes of the deceased regarding the disposal of his property, protects his reputation and in some cases continues pending action instituted by or against a person who is now deceased.
Indian Position - As far as a dead man’s body is concerned criminal law secures a decent burial to all dead men. Section 297 of Indian Penal Code also provides punishment for committing crime which amounts to indignity to any human corpse. The criminal law provides that any imputation against a deceased person, if it harms the reputation of that person if living and is intended to hurt the feeling of his family or other near relatives, shall be offence of defamation under sec 499 of the Indian Penal Code.
The Supreme Court in the case of Ashray Adhikar Abhiyan v Union of India has held that even a homeless person when found dead on the road, has a right of a decent burial or cremation as per his religious faith.
In English Law as well as in Muslim Law the violation of a grave is a criminal offence. As regards reputation of a dead man, it is to some extent protected by criminal law. Under Roman law any insult to the body of the deceased at the timing of funeral, gave the deceased’s heir a right to sue for the injury as it is treated as insult to the heir. Under the law of France the relative of the defamed deceased can successfully sue for damages, if they can prove that some injury it suited from the defamation. Thus, it is not the rights and the hence the personality of the deceased that the law recognises and protects but it is the right and interest of living descendants that it is protected.
So far trust is concerned English Law provides the rule that permanent trust for the maintenance of a dead man’s tomb is illegal and void and property cannot be tied up for this purpose. This rule has been laid down in the leading case of Williams v. Williams where it was said that a corpse is the property of no one. It cannot be disposed of by will or any other instrument. It was further held in this case that even temporary trusts are neither valid nor enforceable. Its fulfilment is lawful and not obligatory. It was held in Mathii Khan v. Veda Leiwai that worship at the tomb of a person is charitable and religious purposes amongst Muslims- hence trust is possible. In Saraswati v. Raja Gopal it was held that worship at the Samadhi of a person, except in a community in which there is a widespread practice of raising tombs and worshipping there at, is not a religious or charitable purpose according to Hindu Law and would not constitute a valid trust or endowment.
Regarding the property of the dead man the law carries out the wishes of the deceased example, a will made by him regarding the disposal of his property. This is done to protect the interest of those who are living and who would get the benefit under the will. This is subject to the rule against perpetuity as well as law of testamentary succession. Indian Transfer of Property Act, section 14 incorporates the rule against perpetuities, which forbids transfer of property for an indefinite time thereby making it alienable. Section 14 of the TPA restrains the power of creating future interests by providing in the rule against perpetuities that such interest must arise within certain limits. The rule of perpetuity looks to the date at which the contingent interest will vest, if it vests at all, and hold it to be void as “perpetuity if this date is too remote”.
Similarly, section 1 and 4 of the Indian Succession Act, 1925 forbids the creation of a will whereby vesting of property is postponed beyond the lifetime of one or more persons and the minority period of the unborn person.
The Drunken Person as a Person not Having the Capacity to Contract Admittedly, the law presumes that every person of full age has the capacity to contract. However, the point has been made supra that certain categories of persons are, under certain conditions, regarded  as incapable of entering into a valid contract. The drunk is one of such persons. Drunkenness is a good defence as regards voluntariness of action. Additionally, it is generally agreed that the contractual capacity  of a drunken person is the same a s that of the one who is mentally afflicted.
Accordingly, the burden of proving drunkenness is on he who asserts it.

04. Hindu Idols

According to the long established theory which was founded upon the religious customs of the Hindus, a Hindu idol is a ‘juristic entity’ having a ‘juridical status’ and it has the power to sue and being sued. But juridical person in the idol is not the material image but the image develops itself into a legal person when it is consecrated by the Pran Pratistha ceremony. According to Hindu law and various decisions of the courts, the position of idol is that of a minor and a manager is appointed to act on idol’s behalf. Like a minor, an idol cannot express itself and like a guardian, manager has some limitations under which he has to act and perform its duties. According to this rule, Shri Guru Granth Sahib is also a juristic person. But other religious texts such as Gita, Quran, Bible are not considered to be juristic persons.

07. Legal Status of Animals

01. Legal Status of Lower Animals

Law does not recognise beasts or lower animals as persons because they are merely things and have no natural or legal rights. Salmond regards them mere objects of legal rights and duties but never subjects of them. Animals are not capable of having rights and duties and hence they are not legal persons.

02. In Ancient Law

 However, in ancient times animals were regarded as having legal rights and being bound by legal duties. Under the ancient Jewish Code ‘if an ox gore (wound with a horn) a man or woman resulting in his or her death, then the ox was to be stoned and its flesh was not to be eaten. There are many examples in ancient Hebrew Codes where cock, bulls, dogs and even the trunk of trees which had fallen on human beings and killed him were tried for homicide.’
There are similar instances in India as well. In number of cases found that, animals were sued in courts in ancient India. There is popular story about the Mughal Emperor Jehangir in which the bullock was presented before the Emperor. However these instances are merely of historical interest and have no relevance in modern law.

03. In Modern Law

Modern Law does not recognise animals as bearer of rights and duties. Law is made for human beings and all things including animals are for men. No animal can be the owner of property from a person to an animal. Animals are merely the object of transfer and are a kind of property, which are owned and possessed by persons. Of course, for the wrongs done by animals the master is held liable. This duty or liability of the master arises due to public policy and public expediency. The liability of the master is strict and not a vicarious liability. The animal could be said to have a legal personality only if the liability of the master is considered vicarious.
In certain cases, the law assumes the liability of the master for an animal as direct while in other cases, liability is not direct. Thus, for keeping animals that are not of dangerous nature the master is not liable for the damage it may do, unless he knows that it was dangerous. The knowledge of the defendant must be shown as to their propensity to do the act in question. However, if the animal is of ferocious nature, the master is responsible for the wrong if he shows negligence in handling it. The owner of animals of this class is also responsible for their trespasses and consequent damage. If a man’s cattle, sheep or poultry, stray into his neighbour’s land or garden, and do such damage as might ordinarily be expected to be done by things of that sort, the owner is liable to his neighbour for the consequences. A charitable trust can be created for the maintenance of stray cattle, broken horses and other animals. Such a trust is created with a view to promote public welfare and advancement of religion. However, if the charitable trust is created only for the benefit of a single horse or a dog, it cannot be regarded as public charitable trust for instance in Re Dean Cooper Dean v. Stevens a test of charged his property with the payment of annual sum of trustees for the maintenance of his horses and dogs. The court held that it is not valid trust enforceable in any way on behalf of these animals. It was observed that the trustee could/spend the money if they pleased in the manner desired by the testator. But if they did not spend the money it would not be considered a breach of trust and in such a situation the money so spent will be of the representatives of the testator.
Similarly, a bequest for the maintenance of the testator’s favourite black mare a bequest of an annual sum for the maintenance of testator’s horses and hounds for a period of 50 years if nay those animals should so long live a trust for the benefit of a parrot during the life of two trustees and survivor of them have all been held valid.

08. Legal Personality of State

The Union of India and the State Governments

The Union of India and the States have also been recognized as corporate entities under Article 300 of the Constitution of India. Article 300 relating to Suits and proceedings is as follows:
(1) The Governor of India may sue or be sued by the name of the Union and the Government of a State may sue or be sued by the name of the State and may, subject to any provisions which may be made by Act of Parliament or of the Legislature of such State enacted by virtue of powers conferred by this Constitution, sue or be sued in relation to their respective affairs in the like cases as the Dominion of India and the corresponding Provinces or the corresponding Indian States might have sued or been sued if this Constitution had not been enacted
(2) If at the commencement of this Constitution
(a) any legal proceedings are pending to which the Dominion of India is a party, the Union of India shall be deemed to be substituted for the Dominion in those proceedings; and
(b) Any legal proceedings are pending to which a Province or an Indian State is a party, the corresponding State shall be deemed to be substituted for the Province or the Indian State in those proceedings.
The President of India as also the Governor of the State is a corporation sole like British Crown. The Ministers of Union or State Government are not legal or constitutional entity and therefore, they are not corporation sole. The reason being that they are appointed by the President or the Governors and are ‘officers’ within the meaning of Articles 53 and 154 of the Constitution. Article 53(1) say that the executive power of the Union shall be vested in the President and shall be exercised by him either directly or through officers subordinate to him in accordance with the Constitution. Similarly, Article 154(1) say that the executive power of the State shall be vested in the Governor and shall be exercised by him either directly or through officers subordinate to him in accordance with the Constitution.
Thus, they are not personally liable for their acts or omissions nor are they directly liable in a Court of law for their official acts. It is the State whether the Centre or the federated unit which is liable for the tort or the breach of contract committed by a Minister in his official capacity.

09. Corporate Personality

01. Partnership Firm and Company

Partnership firm is not a legal person in the eye of law. There is no legal entity, standing over against the partners. The property and debts of the firm are nothing else than those of the partners. It can neither sue nor be sued in its own name. The member partners cannot contract with their partnership firm because a man cannot contract with himself.
Unlike a partnership firm which has no existence apart from its members, incorporated company has a distinct legal or juristic existence independent of its members. Under the law, a corporation or a company is a distinct entity (legal persona) existing independent of its members. An incorporated company exists as a complete being by virtue of its legal personality and is often described as an artificial person in contrast with a human being who is a natural person. A company being a legal entity by itself, is separate and distinct from its promoters, shareholders, directors, officers or employees and as such, it is capable of enjoying rights and being subjects to duties which are not the same as those enjoyed or borne by its members. It may sue or be sued in its own name and may enter into contracts with third parties independently and the members themselves can enter into the contract with the company.

02. Other Legal Personalities

1)    RBI: The Reserve Bank of India has a corporate existence because it is an incorporated body having an independent existence.
2)    UPSC: Union Public Service Commission is not recognized as a legal person as it cannot hold property in their own names and can neither sue nor be sued in a court of law.
3)    A Fund dedicated for a Religious Purpose: it was also of the nature of a legal person. It had certain rights and received certain protection from law, such as the property dedicated to a math.
4)    Registered Societies: Societies registered under Societies Registration Act, 1860 are also held to be legal persons.
5)    Trade Union: Registered trade unions are considered as juristic persons.
6)    Institutions like Church, University, Library etc.: these are considered as juristic persons.
7)    Under the Indian law, Corporation Aggregate are all those bodies or associations which are incorporated under a statute of the Parliament or State Legislature. In this category comes all trading and non-trading associations which are incorporated under the relevant like the State Trading Corporation, Municipal Corporation, Roadways Corporation, the Public Companies, State Bank of India, the Life Insurance Corporation, the universities, Panchayats, Corporative Societies.

03. Juristic Personality or Corporate Personality

Ethical Natural law philosophers of the 17th and 18th centuries as well as the metaphysical theorists of 19th century postulated the concept of will as an essential requirement for exercising legal right. They also believed that personality is the subjective possibility of a rightful will.

Legal personality is an artificial creation of law. Entities recognized by law are capable of being parties to a legal relationship. A natural person is a human being whereas legal persons are artificial persons, such as a corporation, created by law and given certain legal rights and duties of a human being; a being, real or imaginary, who for the purpose of legal reasoning is treated more or less as a human being. All legal persons can sue or be sued.

10. Dimensions of Modern Legal Personality

01. Theories of Juristic Personality

1. Fiction Theory – This theory was put forward by Von Savigny, Salmond, Coke, Blackstone, and Holland etc. According to this theory, the personality of a corporation is different from that of its members. Savigny regarded corporation as an exclusive creation of law having no existence apart from its individual members who form the corporate group and whose acts are attributed to the corporate entity. As a result of this, any change in the membership does not affect the existence of the corporation.
It is essential to recognize clearly the element of legal fiction involved in this process. A company is in law something different from its shareholders or members. The property of the company is not in law the property of the shareholders. The company may become insolvent, while its members remain rich.
Gray supported this theory by saying that it is only human beings that are capable of thinking, therefore it is by way of fiction that we attribute ‘will’ to non-human beings through human beings who are capable of thinking and assign them legal personality.
Wolf said that there are three advantages of this theory. It is analytical, more elastic and it makes easier to disregard juristic personality where it is desirable.
2. Concession Theory – This theory is concerned with the Sovereignty of a State. It pre-supposes that corporation as a legal person has great importance because it is recognized by the State or the law. According to this theory, a juristic person is merely a concession or creation of the state.
Concession Theory is often regarded an offspring of the Fiction Theory as both the theories assert that the corporation within the state have no legal personality except as is conceded by the State. Exponents of the fiction theory, for example, Savigny, Dicey and Salmond are found to support this theory.
Nonetheless, it is obvious that while the fiction theory is ultimately a philosophical theory that a corporation is merely a name and a thing of the intellect, the concession theory is indifferent to the question of the reality of a corporation in as much as it focuses only on the source (State) from which the legal power of the corporation is derived.
3. Group Personality Theory or Realist Sociological Theory – This theory was propounded by Johannes Althusius and carried forward by Otto Van Gierke. This group of theorists believed that every collective group has a real mind, a real will and a real power of action. A corporation therefore, has a real existence, irrespective of the fact whether it is recognized by the State or not.
Gierke believed that the existence of a corporation is real and not based on any fiction.  It is a psychological reality and not a physical reality. He further said that law has no power to create an entity but merely has the right to recognize or not to recognize an entity.
A corporation from the realist perspective is a social organism while a human is regarded as a physical organism. This theory was favoured more by the sociologists rather than by the lawyers. While discussing the realism of the corporate personality, most of the realist jurists claimed that the fiction theory failed to identify the relationship of law with the society in general. The main defect of the fiction theory according to the realist jurists was the ignorance of sociological facts that evolved around the law making process.
Horace Gray, however, denied the existence of collective will.  He called it a figment.  He said that to get rid of the fiction of an attributed by saying that corporation has a real general will, is to derive out one fiction by another.
4. The Bracket Theory or the Symbolist Theory – This theory was propounded by Rudolph Ritter von Jhering (also Ihering). According to Ihering, the conception of corporate personality is essential and is merely an economic device by which we can simplify the task of coordinating legal relations. Hence, when necessary, it is emphasized that the law should look behind the entity to discover the real state of affairs. This is also similar to the concept of lifting of the corporate veil.
This group believed that the juristic personality is only a symbol to facilitate the working of the corporate bodies.  Only the members of the corporation are ‘persons’ in real sense of the term and a bracket is put around them to indicate that they are to be treated as one single unit when they form themselves into a corporation.
5. Purpose Theory or the theory of Zweck Vermogen - The advocates of this theory are Ernst Immanuel Bekker and Alois von Brinz. This theory is also quite similar to the fiction theory. It declared that only human beings can be a person and have rights. This theory also said that a juristic person is no person at all but merely a “subjectless” property destined for a particular purpose. There is ownership but no owner. Thus a juristic person is not constructed round a group of persons but based on an object and purpose.
The assumption that only living persons can be the subject-matter of rights and duties would have deprived imposition of rights and duties on corporations which are non-living entities.  It therefore, became necessary to attribute ‘personality’ to corporations for the purpose of being capable of having rights and duties.
6. Hohfeld’s Theory- He said that juristic persons are creations of arbitrary rules of procedure. According to him, human beings alone are capable of having rights and duties and any group to which the law ascribes juristic personality is merely a procedure for working out the legal rights and jural relations and making them as human beings.
7. Kelsen’s Theory of Legal Personality – He said that there is no difference between legal personality of a company and that of an individual. Personality in the legal sense is only a technical personification of a complex of norms and assigning complexes of rights and duties.

11. Legal Personality on Non-human beings

Legal recognition of nature or some part of the natural world as having legal personality can be seen emerging in various doctrines and developments around the world. The historical concept of public trust has been expanded to make the natural world or parts of it the beneficiary of protection, while various "rights of nature" have been incorporated into the constitutions of several countries. A growing number of lawsuits and other projects are seeking to have non-human primates and other animals declared legal persons, while in New Zealand a river has been recognized as a person.
In 2008, Ecuador became the first country in the world to declare in its constitution that nature is a legal person. Articles 10 and 71-74 of the Constitution recognize the inalienable rights of ecosystems, give individuals the authority to petition on the behalf of ecosystems, and require the government to remedy violations of nature’s rights, including “the right to exist, persist, maintain and regenerate its vital cycles, structure, functions and its processes in evolution.”
Bolivia followed Ecuador in 2009 by similarly giving Constitutional protection to natural ecosystems, in order to override the immediate interests of residents.
Further north, on November 16, 2010, Pittsburg, Pennsylvania became the first city in the United States to declare nature a legal person and to ban “fracking” within the city limits.
During the Middle Ages in Europe it was widely accepted that animals could be held responsible for the commission of crimes. Several hundred trials are recorded of pigs, donkeys, dogs, and other animals that lived in close proximity to humans. Recent scholarly and activist attention has been devoted to questioning whether some or all living species should be recognized as legal persons. The international “Great Ape Project” seeks to imbue non-human primates with attributes of legal personhood--specifically “protections of the right to life, the freedom from arbitrary deprivation of liberty, and protection from torture.”  Spain responded when the parliament’s environmental committee voted in 2008 to approve principles committing Spain to the Great Ape Project.[v]
When people treat non-humans as persons they create a relation of double contingency with them. The choices of the partners are seen in a relation of mutual dependency.  Usually, in a third presumption, addressability, people make a whole range of anthropomorphic assumptions about non-humans and they act accordingly, as if they were humans. The non-humans are supposed to process meaning self-referentially as the humans do, to be equipped with freedom of choice, with self-preserving strategies, reflective capacities, phenomenal world views of their own, empathy and understanding, even with the ability to communicate. These projections do not dispose of the former uncertainty about causal connections. They transform them, however, into a different uncertainty, namely, concerning the inquiries about what questions one should ask the other. And indeed, this is exactly the uncertainty about how to deal with other actors.
Law is opening itself for the entry of new juridical actors - animals and electronic agents. The differences in the outcomes, however, are striking. Although in both cases the law uses the same higly formalized conceptual techniques - juridical personality, capacity for legal action, attribution of rights and duties, participation in administrative and judicial procedures - and although in both cases legal personification is creating the conditions of possibility for the entry of non-humans into political, economic and cultural communication, it is the very legal formalism that allows for great variation among the new legal actors. Animal rights and similar constructs create basically defensive institutions. Paradoxically, they incorporate animals in human society in order to create defences against destructive tendencies of human society against animals. The old formula of social domination of nature is replaced by the new social contract with nature.

12. The Definition and Nature of Liability

One of the most significant words in the field of law, liability means legal responsibility for one's acts or omissions. Failure of a person or entity to meet that responsibility leaves him/her/it open to a lawsuit for any resulting damages or a court order to perform (as in a breach of contract or violation of statute). In order to win a lawsuit the suing party (plaintiff) must prove the legal liability of the defendant if the plaintiff's allegations are shown to be true. This requires evidence of the duty to act, the failure to fulfill that duty, and the connection (proximate cause) of that failure to some injury or harm to the plaintiff. Liability also applies to alleged criminal acts in which the defendant may be responsible for his/her acts which constitute a crime, thus making him/her subject to conviction and punishment. Example: Jack Jumpstart runs a stop sign in his car and hits Sarah Stepforth as she is crossing in the cross-walk. Jack has a duty of care to Sarah (and the public) which he breaches by his negligence, and therefore has liability for Sarah's injuries, and gives her the right to bring a lawsuit against him. However, Jack's father owns the automobile and he, too, may have liability to Sarah based on a statute which makes a car owner liable for any damages caused by the vehicle he owns. The father's responsibility is based on "statutory liability" even though he personally breached no duty. A signer of promissory note has liability for money due if it is not paid, and so would a co-signer who guarantees it. A contractor who has agreed to complete a building has liability to the owner if he fails to complete on time.

13. Kinds of Liability

·         Civil or Criminal and can be Remedial or Penal
·         Civil Liability: Liability in civil proceedings with a purpose of enforcement of rights vested in plaintiff.
·         Criminal Liability: Liability in criminal proceedings with a purpose to punish the wrongdoer.
·         Penal Liability: Aims at punishing the wrongdoer
·         Remedial Liability: Aims at enforcement of rights and punishment is unknown to it.
·         Criminal Liability is always penal
·         Civil Liability is sometimes penal and sometimes remedial[vi]

14.  Theories of Liability

·         Theory of Remedial Liability
·         Theory of Penal Liability [vii]

15. General Conditions of Liability

In Tort Law, the general conditions of Liability are fivefold.

01. Co-existence of two General Conditions

1. Damage is suffered by the plaintiff from the act of the defendant
2. Wrongful intent or culpable negligence on the part of the defendant

02. Damage

Alterum non laedere – to hurt nobody by word or deed – is the fundamental principle applicable in damage. Any violation to this is damage.

03. Damum sine injuria

Damage without legal injury is not actionable.

04. Injuria sine damnum

Legal injury even without injury is actionable

05. Mens Rea

Mens rea has application in criminal wrongs and severe civil wrongs. However Mens rea is not applicable in statutory crimes, crimes independent of hurt or damage, etc. In Tort even negligence, recklessness, nuisance etc. are liable, as these are identified as forms of Mens rea.


[i] V.D. Mahajan’s jurisprudence & legal theory, eastern book company
[iii] http://www.preservearticles.com
[iv] http://www.dalitindia.com
[v] https://vertigo.revues.org/16188?lang=en

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