cover image: The Calcutta Law Journal. April 1  1913

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The Calcutta Law Journal. April 1 1913

1913

In general the statutes recoghize the obligation to accord satisfaction for the moral injury by providing for the publication of the decree of acquittal at the domicil of the accused at the jurisdiction of the appellate Court and at various other places which presumably will aid the accused to obviate and allay anyVol. X VII.) EII ROW.; OF CR I MI NA L JUSTICE. [...] France goes the furthest in this direction providing that The decree or judgment on appeal whence results the innocence of a convicted person shall be posted in the city where the conviction was first pronounced ; in the place where the judgment was reversed ; in the community or place where the crime or misdemeanor shall have been committed ; at the domicil of those who demanded the appeal ; and [...] Sweden requires that the claim shall he addressed to the King and shall be examined by the Minister of Justice who is to pass upon the justice of the claim and the amount of the indemnity. [...] In Austria the trial Court pronouncing the acquittal makes an official enquiry into the facts on which the claim for indemnity is based and the sealed documents with an opinion of the Court are then laid before the Minister of Justice who in turn fixes the amount of the award. [...] On the basis of the findings of the highest Court the Minister of Justice fixes the amount of the indemnity.
law
Pages
12
Published in
India
SARF Document ID
sarf.120108
Segment Pages Author Actions
The Calcutta Law Journal. April 1 1913
39-50 unknown view

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