Prelims, with answers of the Attorney General Quiz that I hosted along with Balaji Subramanian at Kaikuu, the K-Circle Open Quiz Festival in September 2016. This is a General Quiz with each question having a legal flavour to it. Enjoy!
PS- Finals will be uploaded in a week.
4. Laws of the Game
30 questions, 33 points in all
Qs 1-27 carry 1 point each, Qs 28-30 carry two points each.
Top 8 teams will enter the finals.
In case of ties, teams answering a higher number of star marked (*)
questions correctly will qualify. Questions 5, 10, 15, 20, 25, 30 are * marked.
If the tie still persists, sudden death will apply.
Please switch off all mobile phones.
Quizmastersā decision is final.
5. 1.
In the late 2000s, the Hyderabad chapter of the US-based Center for Inquiry
worked with an NGO named Jana Vignana Vedika to ban what they called a ācult of
superstition.ā
Some of the reasons behind trying to get a ban in place was that no patient
records were maintained, and that there were no individual follow-ups. In due
course, different laboratories in the country tried to ascertain whether there were
steroids or heavy metals being used, as alleged.
Subsequently, the High Court dismissed the petition and all pending cases were
dismissed. While filing the suit, the NGOs were irked by a particular term which was
changed following the dismissal, to avoid further legal complications.
What was the Center for Inquiry trying to get banned?
8. 2.
Costing $1 and identical to the original in spelling, capitalization and
punctuation, it topped US sales chart days briefly and was in the Top 10
bestselling books list on Amazon.com on 30th July 2016.
The significant increase in sales was due to something that was said in
Philadelphia. It was listed second only to the then-newly released
āHarry Potter and the Cursed Childā.
What was said in Philadelphia, which may have prompted the wave of
collective national guilt that fuelled this surge in demand?
11. 3.
In 2000, Mattel sued MCA Records for copyright and trademark infringement.
In addition to the main claims, it also alleged that that the cover packaging of
the single sponsored by MCA used a trademarked colour owned by Mattel.
In 2002, Judge Alex Kozinski ruled that the song was protected as a parody
under the trademark doctrine of nominative use and the First Amendment.
Kozinski dismissed the case and concluded his ruling by saying, "The parties
are advised to chill."
Despite the lawsuit, Mattel released a promotional music video of the song
(with modified lyrics) on their web site in 2009, as part of a new marketing
strategy brought in to revive sales.
Name the song in question.
18. 5*.
"I was a magistrate in Croydon at the time and I remember watching it on television the night
it happened and saying to my wife: I think weāll be seeing this ________ chap in front of
Croydon magistrates. I had no idea it would be me who was to sit in judgement. After weād
heard all the evidence, we retired and we all three of us quickly came to conclusion that the
best thing was community service. When we came back into the courtroom there was a very
dramatic pause before Mr Justice Davies delivered the sentence. He looked very relieved.
I think we got it right. He had no criminal record whatsoever, it was his first offence. And
looking at the facts, he was sorely provoked. What was said to him was really quite
unpleasant. Of course he shouldnāt have reacted as he did. But I think he was punished
appropriately."
This is how Justice Edward Handley (retd.) describes his decision in what has been described
as "the most famous common assault case in the history of the English legal system".
Who was the defendant?
21. 6.
The Equality (Titles) Bill was an unpassed Bill of the UK Parliament that sought to
end a measure of gender discrimination and allow for equal succession of female
heirs to hereditary titles and peerages.
It was sponsored by Lord Lucas and Dingwal in the House of Lords and
Conservative MP Mary Macleod in the House of Commons. The Bill was
precipitated by the passage of the 2013 Succession to the Crown Act, which
altered the laws of succession to the British throne so that male heirs no longer
precede their elder sisters. The legislation was therefore meant to align hereditary
titles in accordance with the 1975 Sex Discrimination Act. A number of the bill's
supporters had titles that were in danger of dying out, as their only heirs were
female.
What was the Bill known as colloquially, in reference to the world of pop culture?
24. 7.
X hailed from a family where his ancestors could be traced back to
Hyderabad. His surname was based on the trade carried on by them,
who were in the business of making and fixing palanquins. While
horse-driven carriages made the palanquins redundant, the surname
however stuck.
X's father migrated to Bombay and set up a laundry business, where X
was born in a modest home in Cumballa Hill.
Who?
27. 8.
In the 2012 Indian Grand Prix, Ferrari introduced an ensign on the top
of its chassis. When questioned by the media, Ferrari released a
statement noting that it placed the ensign as a tribute to one of its
countryās āoutstanding institutionsā. A spokesperson for the Indian
Ministry of External Affairs later noted that the use of "sporting events
to promote a cause which is not of a sporting nature and one which is
sub judice is not in keeping with the spirit of sport".
What was the institution?
(OR) What sub judice cause did the MEA accuse Ferrari of promoting?
31. 9.
The Supreme Court of India delivered a ruling on December 30, 1996
regarding industries covered under the TTZ, a 10,400 sq km area. This was in
response to a PIL seeking to protect certain monuments from environmental
pollution. In the ruling, the Court banned the use of coal/coke in industries
located in the TTZ with a mandate for switching over from coal/coke to
natural gas, and relocating them outside the TTZ or shutting down
The TTZ comprises over 40 protected monuments including three World
Heritage Sites.
a) List any two out of the three World Heritage Sites falling under the TTZ.
b) Expand TTZ.
35. 10*.
In 1999, X resolved to file a suit against Prasar Bharati challenging a particular decision
that the court had given with respect to something he was famously associated with.
He also filed a complaint with the Press Council of India against United News of India
(UNI), the news agency that had been breaking news about these particular cases. X
accused the agency of not making efforts to corroborate the stories.
What strengthened his case was that no correlation could be conclusively drawn
between the incidents and what UNI was claiming. For instance, UNI had reported a
case from Patne village of Nashik district saying that nine-year-old Dinesh Prabhakar
had allegedly set himself ablaze due to this but it turned out that he had burnt himself
accidentally while preparing tea. Neither Dinesh nor his parents mentioned anything
about what UNI had claimed in their news coverage which strengthened X's case
further.
Who was X? (or) What was he associated with?
38. 11.
In the sensational Chhindwara Court Murder Case, a villager by the name
of Todal was found dead on 19th September 1949. The police's theory was
that the accused conspired to murder Todal as he was in love with his wife,
while the accused pleaded his innocence and claimed that Todal was killed
owing to some other reason.
The defense subsequently read passages from a non-fiction book that
conclusively proved that the injuries inflicted upon Todal were from
another source.
Which (then) recently released book with a preface by Lord Linlithgow, the
Viceroy, was this?
41. 12.
Administrations around the world have tried to deal with this issue in their own ways. For
instance, in Brunete, a town west of Madrid, undercover volunteers identified culprits using a
town hall database and sent it to the owners in boxes with a āLost Propertyā label. In New
Taipei City, Taiwan, officials offered residents a ticket in a lottery for what was handed in.
The problem has become quite severe in Paris with the cityās former environment chief even
claiming that it lost Paris the 2012 Olympic Games as the Japanese used it as an argument for
opposing its candidacy.
A piece on statistician Nate Silverās blog, FiveThirtyEight.com stated that New York was one of
the worst affected with close to 96 tonnes per day. This was despite Mayor Ed Kochās 1978
law, although the issue was much more severe back then. Though the law is difficult to
enforce, it is said that certain āsocialā incentivesāthe hard glare of a passer-by and the
offenderās feelings of guiltāare at least as powerful as financial and legal incentives.
What issue is this?
44. 13.
An extract from Upendra Baxi's open letter to Fali Nariman, expressing his
displeasure at Nariman's appearance as lead counsel for 'X', in one of the most
(in)famous matters in Indian history.
"All that Mr. Nariman actually says now in recalling the words of Lord Eldon
(perhaps because the culture of the Anglophile Bar lacks utterly any serious
postcolonial apologetic vocabulary!) that āone has lived long enough to find
out that one may be very angry and very wrong!ā. All that he now says is that
he was āvery wrongā in opposing before the Supreme Court the direction for
interim relief issued by the High Court. He does not say that he was equally
very wrong when he contested the High Courtās ruling holding them ('X') liable
at law!"
Who was Nariman's client?
47. 14.
_____ ______ al-Mansour, was a Libyan lawyer, diplomat, and writer. He served in
various international legal postings, including as Libya's Ambassador to the United
Nations, Canada, France and China. In 1972 he became Minister for Petroleum and
in 1984 served as OPEC's chief. In 1986ā1987, he was Libya's Minister for Foreign
Affairs and in 1989 returned to private law practice in Tripoli. In the late 1990s he
served as Libya's lawyer handling charges associated with the high profile
Lockerbie bombing.
However, he also happens to share his given name with an Indian legend 'X', one
that in some sense resulted in the latter's detention at multiple airports following
9/11. While 'X' was born a Hindu, his work has affirmed his atheistic views.
FITB.
50. 15*.
This is an excerpt from the Telegraph's review of "Irish Peacock and Scarlet
Marquess":
"The most sensational trial of the 19th century. Merlin Holland has
produced a gripping and fascinating volume that entirely supersedes
previous accounts of the Queensberry trial. Along with a number of
unfamiliar biographical details and intriguing glimpses into his private life,
it gives us, for the first time, a real sense of how X actually spoke in
conversation. As a work of dramatic legal literature it ranks with Plato's
account of the trial of Socrates. While X failed to make life conform to the
laws of his own writing, he did at least succeed in turning one of the most
important episodes in his biography into a kind of art."
Who is X, who happens to be Hollandās grandfather?
53. 16.
In 2014, Saudi Arabia ordered a ban on 50 āblasphemousā and
āinappropriateā childrenās names as they contradicted the Kingdomās
āreligious and cultural normsā.
Along with western names such as Sandy and Elaine, the ministry forbade
the use of names with royal connotations, such as Malika (Queen) and
Amir (Prince). Some religious names were also been deemed
inappropriate.
54. 16.
However, some of the names on the list did not seem to fit any of the
three categories, leaving the reason for their banning open to speculation.
The list included 'X', a name traditionally not thought to be un-Islamic. 'X'
is known to be the son of Prophet Jacob and the brother of Prophet
Joseph.
However, certain political reasons were attributed to this move by several
media outlets, as 'X' is Arabic for 'Y' and there were ongoing tensions
between the two countries.
What name was banned? (either X or Y)
Which individual could have been the reason for this ban?
57. 17.
The Food Safety and Standards Authority of India (FSSAI) recently clarified which food
business operators would exempted from certain registration regulations. It laid down criteria
under which such exemptions would be granted, one of which was registration under the
Co-operative Societies Act. FSSAI also granted an exemption to an entity registered under
the Bombay Public Trusts Act, Societies Registration Act and the Khadi and Village Industries
Commission. As the organization was already registered under so many societies, FSSAI said
further registration wasnāt necessary. It also observed on the nature of the entity stating that:
1) The socio-economic condition of the individuals was rather low and they were only eking
out a living for themselves by doing petty jobs. They were taking responsibility for the quality
and safety of what was produced.
2) Organizations running and managing food enterprises on the lines of Khadi and Village
Industries must get encouragement.
Which entity was this?
60. 18.
"Driving up I could see the crowd, but living in New Orleans, I actually
thought it was Mardi Gras. There was a large crowd of people outside of
the school. They were throwing things and shouting, and that sort of goes
on in New Orleans at Mardi Grasā, said X many years later.
Former United States Deputy Marshal Charles Burks later recalled, "X
showed a lot of courage. She never cried. She didn't whimper. She just
marched along like a little soldier, and we're all very very proud of her."
Either identify X or put funda.
62. Ruby Bridges
The first black child to desegregate the all-white William Frantz Elementary
School in Louisiana during the New Orleans school desegregation crisis in
1960.
63. 19.
The Film Censorship Board in 'X' decided to modify the
ending of 'Y' by adding the caption 'Finally Y surrendered to
the police'. The Chairman of the Censor Board, Mr. Abdul
Halim said "Normally under our guidelines, there must be
some kind of element of retribution in the movie. Especially if
the characters shown in the movies are involved in crime,
then there must be some kind of comeuppance for that. So,
we asked the producer to put in a caption...This was to send a
message that the law cannot be taken into your own hands".
Give me X and Y.
66. 20*.
An unusual problem was faced by the scorer in a local match
that Sussex was playing in December, 1971. X, an overseas
player who was playing in that match received news from
India that something had happened.
An individual at the ground who had heard of the news asked
how Xās name should go up on the scoreboard. X replied: "As
far as I care, you can call me John Smith."
What had happened in India?
68. Abolition of Privy Purses
and Titles
The Nawab of Pataudi could no longer use his title. His name was changed
to Mansur Ali Khan on the scoreboard.
69. 21.
Though it seems commonplace today, not every project receives this
distinction. Those working on these projects are provided with step-
by-step instructions on how to earn the right to add this.
The American Humane Association (AHA) had begun their work in this
area after an incident that occurred on the set of the film Jesse James
in 1940. After years of collaboration which saw specific guidelines
being framed and the AHA becoming the only organization with this
jurisdiction, it was used for the first time in the 1972 film, āThe
Doberman Gang.ā
What is this the origin of?
72. 22.
The official patent for this was issued on 12th February 1985. Carmela Vitale, to
whom it is credited lives in the state of New York. She is not very well known for
her invention, despite its worldwide spread ā probably because so many different
versions copying the idea have appeared since hers was produced.
Another inventor Alison Grieve had been searching for Vitale for a while stating
that her invention was used possibly billions of times per year. Grieve said, āIt was a
small, yet widespread, problem, answered by a simple solution. And yet, despite its
ubiquity, its inventor is entirely unknown. Who is Carmela Vitale? Where is she
now? Why did she let the patent expire after just a couple of years? I love the
mystery and intrigue. And I want her to receive some of the kudos she deserves.ā
Vitale has since been traced, and comedian John Finnemore even wrote a song for
her.
What did Carmela Vitale invent?
73. āCarmela Vitale, you won't have heard her name.
Just a woman from New York who never got a lot of fame.
But listen as I tell you how with brains and guts and grit,
Carmela changed the world a very tiny little bit.
The boxes then were flimsy and they did that thing they did!
And out of her four seasons three were stuck tight to the lid!ā
76. 23.
According to data collated by PRS Legislative Research, The Rights of Transgender
Persons Bill, 2014, passed by the Rajya Sabha last year was the first one of its kind
to get the Upper Houseās approval in the past 45 years. It was also seen that in the
13th Lok Sabha session (10 October 1999 ā 6 February 2004), 343 such bills were
introduced but only 17 were discussed while only 14 of the 328 bills were discussed
in the 14th LS.
PRS also discovered that only 14 such bills have been passed by both Houses and
become law in the history of the Indian Parliament. The last one passed was the
Supreme Court (Enlargement of Criminal Appellate Jurisdiction) Bill, 1968, which
became an act on August 9, 1970.
What is unique about these bills/what are they called?
79. 24.
As questions swirl around the legality of the demand, The Convention on the Means of
Prohibiting and Preventing the Illicit Import, Export and Transfer of Ownership of Cultural
Property, adopted by UNESCO in 1970, may suggest some answers.
Article 1 of the Convention deemed cultural heritage to be āproperty which, on religious or
secular grounds, is specifically designated by each State as being of importance for
archaeology, prehistory, history, literature, art or scienceā. In effect, this gave the right of
identification to the state of origin of the cultural heritage concerned. However, the object
may have come from a state or nation that no longer exists. The length of time a piece of
cultural heritage spends āabroadā then becomes important.
Another question is about the procedural validity. When the purported agreement was
entered into, the individual concerned was a minor and according to both English Law and
the Indian Contract Act, which came into force in India a few years later, based on common
English law principles, he was not competent to sign a valid contract at that age.
What demand is this?
82. 25*.
At the age of 62, her husband asked her to move out of his
house with her three sons to a little shanty in a neighbouring
house. Reacting with uncharacteristic venom, she challenged
him: āVakil saab, if I go to court, you will never be able to wear
your black coat again!ā
After she won, the Bahrain-educated lawyer took it as a
personal insult and hung up his black coat for good.
How do we know the wife?
85. 26.
Section 301 of the UK Copyright, Designs and Patent Act 1988 provides as follows:
In a nutshell, the section specifically extends the copyright protection granted to a
particular work infinitely. The author bequeathed the royalties from the work to the
Great Ormond Street Hospital, and luckily for them, the PM in 1988, Jim Callaghan,
just happened to be married to the chair of their gubernatorial board. He inserted
this section into the new copyright law, and cemented the immortality of this work.
ID the work, which copyright lawyers now refer to as the copyright that never grew
up.
88. 27.
Copyright law was the primary tool used by the government to suppress a
1925 work. The author died on 30 April 1945, meaning that the term of the
copyright extended for a period of 70 years from then under EU law. After
the authorās death, the copyright was seized by his local government,
which assiduously prevented the workās reproduction.
On 1 January 2016, when the work finally came out of copyright, the
government refused to pass any other law censoring the work, choosing
instead to enlist a local institute of contemporary history to release an
annotated edition, aimed at showing that the work was āincoherent and
badly writtenā rather than āpowerful or seductiveā.
Which work?
92. 28. a)
In 1997, a California court ordered the defendant to pay Fred Goldman $33.5
million in damages. The defendant's assets were auctioned off to raise about
$500,000, which went to the plaintiff. Now bankrupt, the defendant signed a
$600,000 book deal with ReganBooks. The book was announced in 2006, but the
plaintiff caught wind of the launch and sued to recover the rights to the book as
part of the $32.5 million owed to him. In August 2007, a Florida bankruptcy court
ordered the auction of the rights, which the plaintiff acquired. Rather than
suppressing the book, he changed the cover and inserted some additional
material before publishing it himself through Beaufort Books.
The older cover design was leaked on the internet, however, and is now freely
available.
Who is the defendant/author?
96. 28. b)
While the defendant retained prominent lawyer Johnnie Cochran as his counsel,
he also requested the addition of a close friend to the defence team as a volunteer
assistant. This assistant did have a law degree, having practiced for about five
years around the late 1960s, but had gone into business with no intention of
practicing further, letting his attorneyās licence expire. Immediately after the events
leading to the case in 31(a), he frantically re-activated his licence. This led the
media to speculate on the ulterior motives behind his presence on the defence.
Some argued that mere days after the event, he was seen carrying a Louis Vuitton
bag out of the defendantās house, the contents of which were crucial to the
prosecutionās case. As a member of the defence, he could no longer be cross-
examined by the prosecution.
Who was this assistant, whose progeny enjoy near-universal fame today?
99. 29. a)
Some jurisdictions have passed laws which serve to reduce or eliminate the penalty for statutory
rape in cases where the couple's age difference is minor and the sexual contact would not have
been rape if both partners were legally able to give consent. Such laws vary, but can include:
ā¢ Rephrasing the definition of the offense itself to completely exclude situations where the
difference in age is less than a specific time period.
ā¢ Providing an affirmative defence to statutory rape based on the small difference in the
participants' ages, or on evidence of a pre-existing sexual relationship between the accused and
the perceived victim that did not constitute statutory rape.
ā¢ Reducing the severity of the offence from a felony to a misdemeanour, which prevents loss of
civil rights and reduces available penalties.
ā¢ Reducing the penalty in such cases to a fine, probation or community service.
What are these laws called?
102. 29. b)
In 1908, two Boston women were determined to sit for the
Massachusetts bar examination. A lawyer named Arthur
Winfield MacLean agreed to tutor them, and other students
followed over the next few years until finally a school was
established. Arthur MacLean became the schoolās first dean as
it became the first institution in the history of law schools
devoted exclusively to the education of women.
What was the name given to this institution which is now
known as the New England School of Law?
105. 30*. a)
In a recent dispute, Pradeep Panigrahi, the Science and Technology
Minister of an Indian state asserted that there was evidence of its
availability in his state prior to 1500. The minister's claim was based on
a report prepared by an expert Committee headed by Asit Mohanty.
The Committee had to be formed owing to a dispute over the origins
of something. It went on to present a 27-page research paper and a
100-page document comprising 75 points. According to Mohanty, the
report would be beneficial in his state getting a GI tag for it as the
other party to this dispute had not applied for the same due to lack of
concrete evidence to support their claims.
What was the subject of the dispute?
107. Rasgulla
Both Orissa and West Bengal claim that invention of the sweet should be
credited to their state.
108. 30*. b)
The nationality of its creator has been a source of argument between the
two nations for many years. People from Y have long believed it was
created in 1935 by a chef called Bert Sachse, at the Esplanade Hotel, in
honour of X who visited the country in 1926 and again in 1929.
However, the other country, 1500 km to the east also stakes claim to it. In
2008, Helen Leach published The X Story: A Slice of Zās Culinary History, in
which she argued that the earliest known recipe was published in Z.
Subsequently, later research by Andrew Wood and Annabelle Utrecht
suggest that it originated in the United States and was based on an earlier
German dish.
What was the subject of the dispute?