Professional Ethics Cases
Professional Ethics Cases
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1. CASE: P.D. GUPTA V. RAM MURTI AND ANR.
2. CASE: JOHN D’SOUZA V. EDWARD ANI
3. LC GOYAL V NAWAL KISHORE
4. V.P. KUMARAVELU VS THE BAR COUNCIL OF INDIA
5. HIKMAT ALI KHAN VS ISHWAR PRASAD
6. PRAHLAD SARAN GUPTA V BAR COUNCIL OF INDIA
7. PANDURANG DATTATRAYA KHANDEKAR VS BAR COUNCIL OF MAHARASHTRA, ... ON 20
OCTOBER, 1983
8. D.S. DALAL VS STATE BANK OF INDIA AND ORS ON 18 MARCH, 1993
9. V. C. RANGADURAI VS D. GOPALAN AND ORS ON 4 OCTOBER, 1978
10. DEVENDRA BHAI SHANKAR MEHTA VS RAMESHCHANDRA VITHALDAS SHETH
11. M. VEERABHADRA RAO VS TEK CHAND ON 18 OCTOBER, 1984 BAR COUNCIL OF
12. RAM BHAROSEY AGARWAL VS HAR SWARUP MAHESHWARI ON 27 APRIL, 1976
13. NANDLAL KHODIDAS BAROT VS BAR COUNCIL OF GUJARAT AND ORS
14. CHANDRA SHEKHAR SONI VS BAR COUNCIL OF RAJASTHAN AND ORS
15. L.D. JAISINGHANI VS NARAINDAS N. PUNJABI ON 27 NOVEMBER, 1975
The In the present case, there is failure on the part of the appellant to discharge his duties towards his client.
This failure, however, is not deliberate. It is on account of heavy pressure of work coupled with lack of diligence
on the part of his staff as well as on the part of his client in not sending a responsible person with papers to
the office of the Government pleader. However, while the appellant cannot be held responsible for his client's
failure to attend the office, the appellant cannot shift the blame entirely on his staff. As the head of the office it
was his responsibility to make sure that the work is properly attended to and the staff performs its functions
properly and diligently. The appellant has, therefore, rightly been held guilty of negligence. However, in the
absence of any moral turpitude or delinquency on his part, we cannot sustain the finding of the Bar council of
India that his conduct in the facts and circumstances of this case amounts to professional misconduct. In fact
the various mitigating circumstances have been noted by the Bar council of India itself. The negligence on the
part of the appellant in these circumstances cannot be construed as professional misconduct. The appeals are,
therefore, allowed. There will, however, be no order as to costs.
11. M. Veerabhadra Rao vs Tek Chand on 18 October, 1984 Bar Council of India Rules 1975, Part VI, Chapter
II- Standards of professional conduct and etiquette-Read
withRules 34 and 40 of the Civil Rules of Practice framed byAndhra Pradesh High Court-Advocate be attested
affidavit in absence of deponent known to the advocate-Affidavit found to be forged and led to the commission
of fraud and damage to deponent-Whether constitutes professional misconduct.
HELD: Both the fact finding authorities concurrently recorded the finding that the respondent did not put his
signature on the affidavit, Ex. A-1 in the presence of the appellant and yet the appellant by contributing his
attestation to the affidavit made a declaration that the signature was of the appellant made in his presence. We
consider this unambiguous finding wholly incontrovertible in the facts of this case that the appellant never
appeared before the respondent either on October 31, 1972 or November 1, 1972.