CLAT PG Current Affairs — 14 July 2026

2 topics · CLAT PG · 14 July 2026
Supreme Court Upholds RBI Scheme For Merger Of PMC Bank With Unity Small Finance Bank
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Supreme Court Upholds RBI Scheme For Merger Of PMC Bank With Unity Small Finance Bank

What happened

The Supreme Court dismissed petitions challenging the RBI-sanctioned merger of Punjab and Maharashtra Co-operative (PMC) Bank with Unity Small Finance Bank, upholding the Bombay High Court's March 9, 2026 judgment. The scheme, sanctioned January 25, 2022 under Section 45 of the Banking Regulation Act, followed PMC Bank's 2019 fraud linked to HDIL Group. The Court kept open the legal question of whether 'interest of depositors' under Section 45 means number of depositors or value of deposits.

Why it matters

The PMC Bank case is a landmark intersection of banking regulation, constitutional rights, and judicial review limits. When RBI discovered in September 2019 that PMC Bank had concealed massive exposure to the HDIL Group — creating a negative net worth of nearly ₹6,000 crore — it was compelled to act under Section 45 of the Banking Regulation Act, which empowers the RBI to frame amalgamation schemes for distressed banks, even modifying or reducing depositors' rights in public interest.

The core legal tension here is between two legitimate interests: small depositors (numerically 95.5% of all depositors) whose life savings were at stake, and larger depositors (only 4.5% by number but holding 75% of total deposits by value) forced to wait up to ten years for repayment with no accrued interest. The RBI prioritised the former group, arguing rational classification based on livelihood dependency.

For CLAT PG aspirants, the case raises three critical doctrinal issues: (1) the scope of judicial review over expert regulatory decisions — the Court limited its enquiry to the legality of the decision-making process, not its wisdom; (2) the interpretive question of 'interest of depositors' — a purposive versus literal reading of Section 45; and (3) constitutional validity of depositor classification under Article 14. The Court treated amalgamation schemes as statutory, restitutionary mechanisms distinct from ordinary civil proceedings — a crucial distinction for legal reasoning questions.
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Top Weekly Legal Developments India: 6 - 12 July 2026 | SCC Times
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Top Weekly Legal Developments India: 6 - 12 July 2026 | SCC Times

What happened

During 6–12 July 2026, India's Supreme Court and High Courts delivered significant rulings. Key developments include actor-politician Ravi Kishan securing interim relief on personality rights, courts addressing electoral bond disclosure compliance, and judgments on anticipatory bail scope post-arrest. The Supreme Court also heard matters on POCSO evidentiary standards and delimitation petition timelines. These weekly developments, curated by SCC Times, reflect evolving jurisprudence across constitutional, criminal, IP, and electoral law domains relevant to CLAT PG preparation.

Why it matters

The weekly SCC Times digest for 6–12 July 2026 captures the pulse of India's evolving judicial landscape. For CLAT PG aspirants, such compilations are not merely news — they are living laboratories of legal principles tested in examination passages.

Ravi Kishan's personality rights case exemplifies how Indian courts are expanding IP jurisprudence beyond traditional copyright into the right of publicity, drawing from the Amitabh Bachchan and Anil Kapoor precedents. Courts are recognizing that a celebrity's name, voice, likeness, and persona carry independent commercial and dignitary value protected under Articles 19 and 21, and potentially under the nascent Digital Personal Data Protection Act, 2023.

The electoral bond compliance hearings signal that the Supreme Court's February 2024 five-judge bench ruling in Association for Democratic Reforms v. Union of India continues to generate implementation disputes, particularly around SBI's disclosure obligations and the Election Commission's publication mandate.

POCSO evidentiary standard rulings matter because courts are refining the 'corroboration' debate — balancing the presumption of guilt under Section 29 of POCSO against fair trial rights.

For CLAT PG, examiners extract passages from such judgments and test: (a) application of ratio decidendi to hypotheticals, (b) distinction between obiter and ratio, and (c) conflict-of-rights balancing under Part III. Understanding the mechanism — not just the outcome — is what distinguishes high scorers.
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