EH (7)
EH (7)
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No. of questions- 150
a. after the Bill has been passed for the second time by the Legislative Assembly and
more than three months elapse from the date on which the Bill is laid for the second
time before the Legislative Council without the Bill being passed by it
b. after the Bill has been passed for the second time by the Legislative Assembly and
more than one-month elapses from the date on which the Bill is laid for the second
time before the Legislative Council without the Bill being passed by it
c. after the Bill has been passed for the second time by the Legislative Assembly and
more than six months elapse from the date on which the Bill is laid for the second
time before the Legislative Council without the Bill being passed by it
d. only in the form in which it is passed in the joint sitting of both the Houses of the
State Legislature.
Answer: (b)
3. In which case Supreme Court held that “the mental privacy” is a part of
Article 21 of the Constitution?
a. No person shall be prosecuted for the same offence more than once
b. No person shall be punished for the same offence more than once
c. No person shall be prosecuted and punished for the same offence more than once
d. No person shall be prosecuted or punished for the same offence more than once.
Answer: (c)
9. The concept of curative petition was applied by the Supreme Court in the
case of:
10. Which Article of the Constitution puts obligation on the State to promote
with special care the educational and economic interests of the weaker
sections of the people, and, in particular, of the Scheduled Castes and the
Scheduled Tribes?
a. Article 21A
b. Article 46
c. Article 45
d. Article 43.
Answer: (b)
11. For the election of the President, the electoral college shall consist of:
12. The President of India may be removed from the office by impeachment on
the ground of:
a. proved misbehavior
b. proved misbehavior and misconduct
c. violation of the Constitution
d. proved misbehavior or incapacity.
Answer: (c)
13. All doubts and disputes arising out of or in connection with the election of
the President shall be inquired into and decided by the:
a. Supreme Court
b. Election Commission of India
c. Parliament in consultation with Election Commission of India
d. Elected members of Parliament and State Legislative Assemblies.
Answer: (a)
14. The total number of ministers, including the Prime Minister, in the Council
of Ministers shall not exceed:
15. Under which Article of the Constitution the Prime Minister is duty bound to
furnish information to the President regarding all decisions of Council of
Ministers relating to the administration of the affairs of the Union and
proposals for legislation as the President may call for?
a. Article 76
b. Article 77
c. Article 78
d. Article 79.
Answer: (c)
a. Article 361
b. Article 361A
c. Article 361B
d. Article 362.
Answer: (c)
a. Article 266
b. Article 267
c. Article 268
d. Article 269.
Answer: (b)
18. Who in respect of every financial year cause to be laid before both the
Houses of Parliament, a statement of the estimated receipts and expenditure
of the Government of India for the year, which is known as “annual financial
statement”?
a. President
b. Prime Minister
c. Finance Minister
d. Speaker of the House.
Answer: (a)
19. In which case the Supreme Court upheld the use of Aadhaar Card for
certain government schemes?
a. PUDR v. UOI
b. K.S. Puttaswamy v. UOI
c. M.C. Mehta v. UOI
d. Sandeep v. UOI.
Answer: (b)
20. In which case the Supreme Court upheld the Haryana Panchayati Raj Act
prescribing minimum educational qualifications for contesting elections of
Panchayats?
22. In which case the administration had approached the High Court seeking
order for termination of pregnancy of an orphan woman, suffering from mild
mental retardation and found pregnant (allegedly on having been raped)?
a. Articles 19 and 20
b. Articles 21 and 22
c. Articles 20 and 21
d. Articles 19 and 21.
Answer: (c)
24. The joint sitting of both the Houses of Parliament in certain cases can be
called by the President under Article:
a. 107
b. 108
c. 109
d. 110.
Answer: (b)
26. Which of the following judgment of the Supreme Court is related to rights
of third gender?
27. Which Schedule of the Constitution of India deals with the provisions as to
disqualification on ground of defection?
a. VII
b. VIII
c. IX
d. X.
Answer: (d)
28. In which case the Supreme Court of India held that “right to life” does not
include “right to die”?
29. In which case the Supreme Court ruled that the defence of “sovereign
immunity” is alien to the concept of guarantee of fundamental rights?
31. Financial emergency under Article 360 of the Constitution once imposed,
after the approval by both the Houses of Parliament within the period of two
months, shall remain valid for the period of:
a. six months
b. one year
c. three years
d. till it is revoked by the Parliament.
Answer: (d)
34. Which Article of the Constitution says that Law declared by the Supreme
Court shall be binding on all courts within the territory of India?
a. Article 140
b. Article 141
c. Article 142
d. Article 146.
Answer: (b)
36. The doctrine of “occupied field” was applied by the Supreme Court in the
case of:
a. Article 340
b. Article 341
c. Article 342
d. Article 16(4).
Answer: (a)
a. external aggression
b. external aggression and internal disturbance
c. external aggression and armed rebellion
d. war, external aggression and armed rebellion.
Answer: (b)
a. A law put into the IX Schedule of the Constitution cannot be challenged on the
ground of violation of basic structure
b. A law put into the IX Schedule of the Constitution can be challenged on the ground
of violation of basic structure, irrespective of the fact when the law was put in the IX
Schedule
c. Only those laws which have been put into the IX Schedule after 24th April, 1973 can
be challenged on the ground of violation of basic structure
d. Only those laws which have been put into the IX Schedule after 10th May, 1973 can
be challenged on the ground of violation of basic structure.
Answer: (c)
41. Article 30 of the Constitution gives the right to establish and administer
educational institutions of their choice to all minorities whether based on:
a. religion
b. language
c. religion or language
d. religion and language.
Answer: (c)
42. In which case the Supreme Court observed that there is no fundamental
right to strike?
a. Article 19
b. Article 21
c. Article 51A(e)
d. Article 51A(g).
Answer: (c)
44. Article 29(2) of the Constitution provides that “No citizen shall be denied
admission into any educational institution maintained by the State or receiving
aid out of State funds on grounds only of:
45. Under which Articles of the Constitution the rights given therein are
available only to the citizens of India?
a. Prime Minister
b. Speaker/Chairman of the House
c. Vice-President
d. President.
Answer: (d)
47. Which Article of the Constitution provides that “Subject to the provisions
of any law made by Parliament or any rules made under Article 145, the
Supreme Court shall have the power to review any judgement pronounced or
order made by it”?
a. Article 134
b. Article 135
c. Article 137
d. Article 142.
Answer: (c)
48. The total number of members in the Legislative Council of a State having
such a Council shall not exceed:
a. one-third of the total number of members in the Legislative Assembly of that State
b. one-half of the total number of members in the Legislative Assembly of that State
c. two-third of the total number of members in the Legislative Assembly of that State
d. the total number of members in the Legislative Assembly of that State.
Answer: (a)
a. one month
b. six months
c. six weeks
d. two months.
Answer: (c)
50. In which case the Supreme Court declared Clauses (4) and (5) of Article 368
of the Constitution as unconstitutional?
a. Right
b. Duty
c. Disability
d. Liability.
Answer: (c)
a. Salmond
b. Allen
c. Savigny
d. Austin.
Answer: (b)
53. Who stated that “I recognize without hesitation that judges must and do
legislate, but they do so only interstitially; they are confined from molar to
molecular motions”?
a. Justice Cardozo
b. Justice Holmes
c. Gray
d. Kant.
Answer: (b)
a. Distributive, Corrective
b. Universal, Classic
c. Classic, Corrective
d. Particular, Distributive.
Answer: (a)
55. According to Hohfeld if ‘X’ has a power, ‘Y’ has a liability. A liability in ‘Y’
means the absence of immunity in him. Therefore:
a. Baker
b. Ihering
c. Savigny
d. Salmond.
Answer: (b)
58. X was allowed to put her goods in certain rooms in Y’s house. X sent them
by agent, who locked them in the rooms allotted for that purpose in Y’s house
by Y, and took away the key.
a. Holmes
b. Salmond
c. Jerome Frank
d. Kelsen.
Answer: (c)
60. Salmond distinguished between “corporeal possession” and “incorporeal
possession”. According to him corporeal possession refers to:
a. Possession of rights
b. Possession of physical objects
c. intention to possess rights
d. intention to possess physical objects.
Answer: (b)
a. Dias
b. Salmond
c. Kelsen
d. Austin.
Answer: (d)
62. Who summarized Austin’s thesis by stating that “this, at first sight, looks
like a circular reasoning. Law is law since it is made by the Sovereign. The
Sovereign is Sovereign because he makes the law”?
a. Hart
b. Holland
c. Buckland
d. Fuller.
Answer: (c)
63. Who is the author of the famous book “The Concept of Law”?
a. Hart
b. Upendra Baxi
c. Austin
d. Kelsen.
Answer: (a)
a. Savigny
b. Maine
c. Savigny and Maine
d. Maitland.
Answer: (b)
65. Who is the author of the famous work “Law in the Making”?
a. Kelsen
b. Upendra Baxi
c. Henry Maine
d. C.K. Allen.
Answer: (d)
66. Which of the following was the famous work of Jeremy Bentham?
67. Who used the “social solidarity” as a criterion of the validity of Laws?
a. Duguit
b. Pound
c. Ihering
d. Kelsen.
Answer: (a)
68. Find out the odd man out among the following:
a. Savigny
b. Puchta
c. Hegel
d. Comte.
Answer: (d)
69. Which school regards the judge made law as “an unauthorized
encroachment upon the powers of the legislators to make law”?
a. Historical school
b. Realist school
c. Sociological school
d. Analytical school.
Answer: (d)
70. Who said that “Jurisprudence was the first of the social sciences to be
born”?
a. Duguit
b. Savigny
c. Wurzel
d. Hegel.
Answer: (c)
a. creative code
b. consolidating code
c. customary code
d. refined code.
Answer: (a)
a. Pound
b. Ihering
c. Duguit
d. Kelsen.
Answer: (a)
a. Natural
b. Philosophical
c. Historical
d. Pure.
Answer: (d)
a. Justice Holmes
b. John Austin
c. Kelsen
d. Ihering.
Answer: (b)
a. possessio naturales
b. possessio civilis
c. possessio interdicts
d. praetor’s interdicts.
Answer: (a)
a. Duguit
b. Ihering
c. Keeton
d. Salmond.
Answer: (d)
82. The reaction against which law theories provided a rich bed in which the
seeds of historical scholarship took root and spread?
a. Family
b. State
c. Clan
d. Tribe.
Answer: (b)
85. That “Life of Law has not been logic, it has been experience” was observed
by:
a. Holmes
b. Hohfeld
c. Holland
d. Henry Maine.
Answer: (a)
86. According to Historical School, the most important source of law is:
a. Legislation
b. Custom
c. Judicial Precedent
d. Morality.
Answer: (b)
a. Untouchability
b. Panchayat system
c. Community Labour (SHRAMDAN)
d. GURUKUL Education.
Answer: (a)
88. In Pure Theory of Law, a legal norm derives its validity from:
a. Sovereign
b. Higher Legal Norm
c. Higher Moral Norm
d. Higher Social Norm.
Answer: (b)
a. Ownership
b. Possession
c. Right
d. Might.
Answer: (b)
a. A just claim
b. A righteous claim
c. A legal claim
d. A moral claim.
Answer: (c)
a. right in rem
b. right in personam
c. an easement right
d. property right.
Answer: (a)
93. Savigny, Salmond and Dicey were the main supporters of which theory of
personality?
a. Fiction theory
b. Bracket theory
c. Organic theory
d. Concession theory.
Answer: (a)
a. Ehrlich
b. Durkheim
c. Henry Maine
d. Roscoe Pound.
Answer: (d)
97. Who said that “the essence of legal right seems to me to be not legally
guaranteed power to realize an interest”?
a. Salmond
b. Allen
c. Paton
d. Hegel.
Answer: (b)
a. Illimitability
b. Essentiality
c. Indivisibility
d. Divinity.
Answer: (d)
a. John Locke
b. Kelsen
c. Julius Stone
d. Ihering.
Answer: (c)
101. Under the Indian Contract Act, 1872 a finder of goods is subject to the
same duties as a:
a. bailee
b. trustee
c. owner
d. custodian.
Answer: (a)
102. ‘A’ and ‘B’ agree that ‘A’ shall pay Rs. 20000 for which ‘B’ shall deliver
either rice or heroin. The contract is:
a. void
b. valid
c. void as to delivery of heroin and valid as to delivery of rice
d. voidable.
Answer: (c)
103. ‘A’ supplies to, the dependent wife and children of lunatic ‘B’, necessities
suitable to their needs and conditions of life. ‘A’ is:
104. ‘A’ proposes, by letter, to sell a house to ‘B’ at a certain price. “B’ accepts
the proposal of ‘A’ by posting a letter to ‘A’. Select the correct option:
a. Harvey v. Facey
b. Carlill v. Carbolic Smoke Ball Co.
c. Hadley v. Baxendale
d. Solomon v. Solomon.
Answer: (c)
106. ‘A’ agrees to buy from ‘B’ a certain horse. It turns out that horse was dead
at the time of the bargain, though neither party was aware of the fact. The
agreement is:
a. valid
b. void
c. voidable
d. valid for claim of compensation.
Answer: (b)
107. ‘A’ agrees to sell his house worth Rs. 5 lac for Rs. 1000/- ‘A’ denies that
his consent to the agreement was freely given.
108. ‘A’ and ‘B’ jointly owe Rs. 100/- to ‘C’. ‘A’ alone pays the whole amount to
‘C’ and ‘B’ not knowing this fact also pays Rs. 1001- to ‘C’:
109. ‘A’ lets to ’13’, for hire, a horse for his riding. ‘B’ uses the horse to drive
the carriage:
110. ‘A’ gives authority to ‘B’ to sell A’s land and to pay himself, out of the
proceeds, the debts due to him from ‘A:
112. Which one of the following is not an element of the tort of malicious
prosecution?
113. In his definition of ‘Law of Tort’, Winfield supports the principle given in
the maxim:
a. Wrongful intention
b. Defamatory statement
c. Publication
d. Referring to the Plaintiff.
Answer: (a)
115. The maxim ‘qui facit per alium facit per se’ means:
a. employment
b. payment of wages
c. control of master over servant’s acts
d. conditions of service.
Answer: (c)
117. Which one of the following is not an essential element of the defence of
fair comment in tort of defamation?
118. Which one of the following is not a defence to the strict liability rule in
tort?
119. A nine-year-old boy bought petrol in a Can from the defendant, a petrol
dealer by falsely stating that his mother needed it for her car. In fact, he used it
to play with it, and, in doing so, sustained burn injuries. The defendant is:
a. liable in negligence for supplying petrol to so young a boy who was not expected to
know the properties of petrol
b. not liable in negligence as the boy had made a false statement and the defendant
believed it to be true
c. there was contributory negligence of the boy, therefore defendant is not liable
d. not liable in negligence because possession of the Can and money proved that boy
acted as a reasonable person.
Answer: (a)
120. An accused head master of a school threatens a lady teacher to sign
certain blank papers and if she does not do so, he would defame her. The head
master is guilty of:
a. extortion
b. robbery
c. criminal intimidation
d. attempt to commit defamation.
Answer: (c)
a. theft
b. extortion
c. riot
d. dacoity.
Answer: (d)
123. Which one of the following is accepted as mens rea for constituting the
offence of theft?
a. Knowingly
b. Dishonestly
c. Voluntarily
d. Fraudulently.
Answer: (b)
124. ‘A’ inserts his finger into the anus of a woman against her will. Under
which one of the following Sections of the Indian Penal Code, 1860 ‘A’ is
punishable?
a. Section 376
b. Section 354
c. Section 509
d. Section 377.
Answer: (a)
125. For the offence of cheating, which one of the following state(s) of guilty
mind/s is/are to be proved?
a. Fraudulently
b. Dishonestly
c. Fraudulently or dishonestly
d. Fraudulently and dishonestly.
Answer: (c)
126. ‘A’ voluntarily throws into a river a ring belonging to ‘Z’, with the intention
of thereby causing wrongful loss to ‘Z’. ‘A’ has committed:
a. theft
b. mischief
c. extortion
d. cheating.
Answer: (b)
127. ‘A’ signs his own name to a bill of exchange, intending that it may be
believed that the bill was drawn by another person of the same name. ‘A’
commits:
a. cheating
b. attempt of cheating
c. attempt of forgery
d. forgery.
Answer: (d)
128. The essential tests for the existence of international custom are:
a. ancient nature
b. ancient nature, uniform states practice
c. ancient nature, uniform states practice and opinio juris sive necessitatis
d. uniform states practice and opinio juris sive necessitatis.
Answer: (d)
129. Which body of the United Nations requested International Court of Justice
to give an advisory opinion on the issue of legality of use or threat to use
nuclear weapons on 15 December 1994?
a. W.H.O.
b. U.N. General Assembly
c. Security Council
d. Economic and Social Council.
Answer: (b)
130. India acceded to the International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights
in:
a. 1966
b. 1976
c. 1979
d. 1972.
Answer: (c)
131. When, U.N. Human Rights Council, which is successor to the U.N.
Commission on Human Rights, was established?
a. 2006
b. 2010
c. 2012
d. 2013.
Answer: (a)
133. If International Law were only a kind of morality, the framers of State
Papers Concerning Foreign Policy would throw all, their strength on moral
argument. Who made this observation?
a. Fitzmaurice
b. John Austin
c. Frederick Pollock
d. J.G. Starke.
Answer: (c)
135. Who said that the Public International Law is “a Vanishing Point of
Jurisprudence”?
a. Grotius
b. Holland
c. Briefly
d. Fawcett.
Answer: (b)
136. The Judges of International Court of Justice are elected for nine years and
the court shall elect its President or Vice-President for a term of:
a. Three years
b. Five years
c. Seven years
d. Nine years.
Answer: (a)
a. Holland
b. Grotius
c. Starke
d. Oppenheim.
Answer: (a)
139. Article 51 of the UN Charter saves which of the following rights as being
inherent?
a. Right of self-defence
b. Right of self-determination
c. Right to free trade with member-States
d. Right to enter into relations with other States.
Answer: (a)
140. Which one of the following essentials for seeking claim of patent is
wrong?
a. Compulsory Licensing
b. Novelty
c. Non-obviousness
d. Industrial Utility.
Answer: (a)
141. Indian Copyright Act, 1957 protects the literary work for following term:
a. Gleevec
b. Macsarin
c. Aspirin
d. Zimmerman.
Answer: (a)
143. An invention under the Patent in India can be protected for a term of:
a. 10 years
b. 20 years
c. 25 years
d. 50 years.
Answer: (b)
144. In which of the following case, the Supreme Court of India held that ‘if a
Hindu husband converts into Islam and marries again, he will be guilty of
bigamy?
145. A married couple has adopted a son under the provisions of the Hindu
Adoptions and Maintenance Act, 1956. While the adopted son is alive, the
couple is willing to adopt another son as the said adopted son was not
medically fit to produce a child. The couple:
147. ‘A’ dies leaving behind a son X and a married daughter Y, a suit filed by
‘A’, can be continued by:
148. As Per the Copyright Act 1957, who is not included in the definition of
Performer?
a. Share Channel
b. Cobbler
c. Singer
d. Acrobat.
Answer: (b)
a. discovery
b. finding
c. observation
d. invention.
Answer: (d)
150. Under the Copyright Act, 1957 copyright can be granted to?
a. invention
b. literary, dramatic, musical, and artistic work
c. design of bottle
d. handicrafts.
Answer: (b)