who is Krishna iyer ??? tell some words abt him ... who answers first will be marked as brainliest ...
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Justice V.R. Krishna Iyer shined light on parts of the law and the world that were hidden in plain sight
A few years ago, when I asked my father to recommend a judgment of the Supreme Court for me to read, he mentioned the
CIT v. T.N. Aravinda Reddy (1979) case. Authored by Justice V.R. Krishna Iyer, the judgment is pure art. It is about two pages long and is prose that flirts with poetry. Take, for instance, the following: “The signification of a word of plural semantic shades may, in a given text, depend on the pressure of the context or other indicia. Absent such compelling mutation of sense, the speech of the lay is also the language of the law.” Thus, hundreds of pages in textbooks on the principles of statutory interpretation are magically reduced to two sentences.
The judgment also featured spicy embellishments. I wonder, for example, whether the following words directed towards the man in whose favour the matter was ultimately decided represent a compliment or a reprimand: “We have declined to hear Shri S.T. Desai's artillery fire although he was armed cap a pie with Mitakshara lore and law. A point of suffocating scholarship sometimes arrives in court when one nostalgically remembers the escapist verse, ‘Where ignorance is blist; ’Tis is folly to be wise.’ Amen!”
A few years ago, when I asked my father to recommend a judgment of the Supreme Court for me to read, he mentioned the
CIT v. T.N. Aravinda Reddy (1979) case. Authored by Justice V.R. Krishna Iyer, the judgment is pure art. It is about two pages long and is prose that flirts with poetry. Take, for instance, the following: “The signification of a word of plural semantic shades may, in a given text, depend on the pressure of the context or other indicia. Absent such compelling mutation of sense, the speech of the lay is also the language of the law.” Thus, hundreds of pages in textbooks on the principles of statutory interpretation are magically reduced to two sentences.
The judgment also featured spicy embellishments. I wonder, for example, whether the following words directed towards the man in whose favour the matter was ultimately decided represent a compliment or a reprimand: “We have declined to hear Shri S.T. Desai's artillery fire although he was armed cap a pie with Mitakshara lore and law. A point of suffocating scholarship sometimes arrives in court when one nostalgically remembers the escapist verse, ‘Where ignorance is blist; ’Tis is folly to be wise.’ Amen!”
shazi16:
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Justice Vaidyanathapuram Rama Iyer Krishna Iyer referred to as a conscience keeper of justice in India, was a visionary and a pathbreaking judge, who reformed the Indian criminal justice system with .
please mark as brainlist.
please mark as brainlist.
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