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Civil court’s jurisdiction would not be barred in which of the following cases?
I. Where the order under r 18 of the settlement rules is patently illegal or without jurisdiction
II. Where the remedy provided by the regulation to adjudge the objection raised, is not sufficient
III. Where complicated question relating to the title are involved
IV. Where the plaintiff seeks declaration of his title over the land from which he is sought to be evicted
I, III
II, V
II, IV
All of these
- Statement I: Civil court can intervene if an order under rule 18 of the settlement rules is patently illegal or without jurisdiction. Courts can step in if orders are clearly unfounded.
- Statement II: Courts can act when available regulations do not suffice for addressing objections. If the remedy isn't adequate, civil jurisdiction is applicable.
- Statement III: Civil courts handle complicated title-related questions. If determining title involves complexity, civil court jurisdiction applies.
- Statement IV: If a plaintiff seeks a declaration of title over land they're being evicted from, civil jurisdiction is applicable. Courts can provide remedies in such cases.
- Option 1: I, III - Involves illegal orders and complicated title questions.
- Option 2: II, V - Addresses insufficient remedy but V is not listed; invalid option.
- Option 3: II, IV - Includes insufficient remedy and declaration of title issues.
- Option 4: All of these - Encompasses all scenarios where civil jurisdiction isn't barred.
Option 4: All of these covers all situations that allow for civil court jurisdiction.
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