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HOW TO READ A LEGAL JUDGEMENT ?

Steps to Read a Legal Judgment (Easy & Practical Guide)

1. Start with the Case Header

Identify the basics:

  • Court name
  • Case number
  • Parties involved
  • Date of judgment
  • Name of the judge(s)
    This helps you understand the context before diving in.

2. Read the Introductory Paragraph

This section usually tells you:

  • What the case is about
  • Which law or issue is being decided
  • Whether it’s an appeal, writ, revision, or trial order

It gives a bird’s-eye view of the entire case.


3. Understand the Facts of the Case

Focus on:

  • Background facts
  • Chronology of events
  • Key disputes between parties

Don’t get lost in unnecessary minor details.
Identify only the material facts.


4. Note the Procedural History

Check:

  • Orders of lower courts
  • Appeals/ revisions
  • Findings already recorded

This helps you understand why the case reached this court.


5. Identify the Issues Framed

Courts clearly mention the issues/questions, such as:

  • “Whether the accused had the intention…”
  • “Whether the contract is enforceable…”
  • “Whether the FIR should be quashed…”

These issues guide the entire judgment.


6. Examine Arguments by Both Sides

Focus on:

  • Petitioner/Appellant arguments
  • Respondent/State arguments
  • Evidence relied upon
  • Statutory provisions used

This shows how each side built its case.


7. Study the Court’s Analysis (Most Important Part)

This section contains:

  • Interpretation of law
  • Discussion of evidence
  • Application of principles
  • Precedents cited
  • Logic of the judge

This is where the legal reasoning lies.


8. Read the Final Holding / Ratio Decidendi

This is the legal principle the court establishes.

Ask:

  • What rule of law did the court lay down?
  • How did it answer each issue?
  • Why did it decide in favor of one side?

9. Note the Final Order (Operative Part)

Court may:

  • Acquit / Convict
  • Allow / Dismiss petition
  • Quash FIR
  • Grant compensation
  • Modify sentence

This is the practical outcome of the judgment.


Extract Key Takeaways

For exam, practice, or drafting, write:

  • Facts (short)
  • Issues
  • Rule of law (ratio)
  • Findings
  • Final conclusion
    This becomes your quick reference note.

Bonus Tips

✔ Highlight only essential paragraphs

✔ Avoid reading long quotations fully—understand the essence

✔ Compare with other similar precedents

✔ Note dissenting opinions (if any)

✔ Maintain a personal “Case Law Notebook”

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