LexBatch is an independent legal education platform explaining core LL.B. subjects, Indian laws, legal concepts and practical aspects of litigation with clarity and academic depth.

Here you will find lecture-style content, notes, articles and case-law explanations on family law, constitutional law, criminal law, cyber law, consumer protection, contract law, jurisprudence, procedural laws, public law and other important legal subjects.

LexBatch is built for law students, judiciary aspirants, advocates, legal researchers, exam learners and citizens who want to understand law beyond bare definitions.

The platform connects statutory provisions with case-law reasoning, classroom learning, litigation practice and real-life legal context.

For structured notes, bare acts, legal essays and lecture content, visit: lexbatch.com


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Important Update 📢

Drug Law India is now **LexBatch**.

Our website has moved from **druglawindia.com** to **lexbatch.com**.

The mission remains the same: clear, structured and practical legal education for law students, judiciary aspirants, advocates and serious learners.

New name. Wider vision. Same commitment.

**Learn. Litigate. Succeed.**

Visit: **lexbatch.com**

1 week ago | [YT] | 1

LexBatch

What makes a Hindu marriage legally valid?

Tonight at 8 PM IST, Lecture 7 of our Hindu Law series premieres on YouTube.

We will discuss Sections 5, 7 and 17 of the Hindu Marriage Act — conditions of marriage, ceremonies, Saptapadi and bigamy.

Watch / set reminder:
https://youtu.be/VnQyjhmrztI

2 weeks ago | [YT] | 1

LexBatch

In my latest article on Drug Law India, I discuss the powerful constitutional idea that law must remain rational throughout its life.

The article explores the maxim:

Cessante ratione legis cessat ipsa lex: When the reason for the law ceases, the law itself ceases.

Through important Indian cases such as:

1. His Holiness Shri Swamiji of Shri Admar Mutt
2. Motor General Traders v. State of Andhra Pradesh
3. Malpe Vishwanath Acharya v. State of Maharashtra
4. Joseph Shine v. Union of India
5. Kranti Associates v. Masood Ahmed Khan

the article explains how Article 14 is not limited to formal equality. It also examines whether a law, classification, exemption, or judicial order continues to have a rational foundation.

From rent-control laws to outdated criminal provisions and unreasoned judicial orders, one principle remains constant:

Law is not preserved by age, authority, or repetition. It is preserved by reason.

Read the full article here:druglawindia.com/constitutional-law/article-14-obs…

#DrugLawIndia #ConstitutionalLaw #Article14 #LegalMaxims

1 month ago (edited) | [YT] | 1