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Advocates Act, 1961

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Advocates Act, 1961:

The central government enacted the Advocates Act in 1961. This act has been in force in entire India. It brought revolutionary changes in the legal profession in India. It sets out to achieve the utility and dignity of the profession of law on an All-India basis. The preamble of the act says that the act amends as well as consolidates the law relating to legal practitioners.

ADVOCATES ACT, 1961

The Advocates Act passed in May 1961 and enforced on 16th August 1961 applies to the whole of India.

The Advocates Act was to amend the laws related to legal practitioners. It provides the constitution of members for the State Bar Council and Bar Council of India.

The act aims to constitute only one class of legal practitioners known as ‘Advocate’ and provides uniform qualification for admission to the Bar. The act also vests the powers on the Bar Council of India and the State Bar Council to take disciplinary action when required. Let’s get into the depth to understand the Advocates Act, 1961 better.

Characteristics of Advocates Act

Sections under Advocates Act

Section 2 (1)(a) of the Advocates Act, 1961 provides the meaning of an advocate. Accordingly, an advocate is a person enrolled on any roll under the provision of this Act. Before enacting this act, there were different classes of legal practitioners, referred to as pleaders, vakils, lawyers, attorneys.

Section 2(1)(i) of the act defines a law graduate as a person who obtained a Bachelor’s degree in law from any university established under law.

Section 2(1)(k) of the Advocates Act defines Roll as a roll of advocates prepared and maintained under this Act.

Section 2(1)(n) of the act defines State Roll as a roll of advocates maintained by the State Bar Council under Section 17.

State Bar Council

Section 3 of the Advocates Act, 1961 states that for every state, there shall be a Bar Council in the manner prescribed under Section 3(1).

Number of Members of State Bar Council

According to Section 3(2)(a), the Advocate General of the concerned state is the ex-officio member of the State Bar Council.

As per Section 3(2)(b) following number of members should be there in the bar council of state:

According to Section 3(3), there shall be a Chairman and a Vice-Chairman of the State Bar Council, elected in the manner prescribed.

The term of office of the member of the State Bar Council is for five years (Section 8). The five-year span starts from the date of publication of the result of the elections.

Functions of State Bar Council

Section 6 of the Advocates Act, 1961 provides the function of the State Bar Council. Functions of the council are as follows:

Bar Council Of India

Section 4 of the Advocates Act provides that there shall be a bar council for the whole of India and is known as the Bar Council of India.

Constitution of the Bar Council of India

There shall be the following members in the Bar council of India:

Attorney General and Solicitor general remains a member of the Bar Council of India till they hold their post.

Functions of Bar Council Of India

Section 7 of the Advocate Act lays down the functions of the Bar Council of India.

Following are the functions performed by the Bar Council of India:

Power to make rules

Section 15 of the Advocates Act gives power to the Bar Council to make rules to carry out its purpose. The rules are for:

The section of the Act also provides that no rules by the State Bar Council under this section shall have effect after approval from the Bar Council of India.

Disqualification of a member of Bar Council

Section 10B of the act states conditions related to disqualification of the Bar Council of India members.

An elected member of the Bar Council should vacate his office if he is declared absent without sufficient excuse for three consecutive meetings by the Bar council of state he is a member. The member can also be disqualified from being a member of the council if his name is removed from the roll of advocates or upon disqualification by any rule made by the Bar Council of India.

Disqualification of Enrolment

Section 24 A provides criteria for disqualification of a person for enrolment. A person gets disqualified from being enrolled as an advocate due to the following reasons:

Such disqualification cease to have effect after two years has passed since his dismissal or release.

Status of Bar Council

Section 5 of the Advocates Act provides the Bar Council with body corporate. It provides the following features of the Bar Council:

Bar Council can have the power to acquire or hold property both movable and immovable. The Bar Council can acquire and hold a property. It can also enter into a contract on its name and sue and get sued in its name.

The staff of Bar Council

Section 11 of the Advocates Act, 1961 states that every bar council should appoint a secretary and an accountant. Any other staff member can be appointed as required, and the Secretary and accountant should possess skills as prescribed.

Membership in International Bodies

Section 7A of the Advocates Act provides that the Bar Council of India can become a member of the international legal bodies. The Bar Council can contribute an amount to such bodies by way of subscription and authorise expenditure if a representative participates in an international conference or seminar.

Senior Advocate

Section 16 of the Advocates Act classifies advocates into two types, senior advocates and other advocates.

The Supreme Court or the High Court can designate an advocate as a senior advocate with his consent. For being eligible to be a senior advocate, an advocate must be in the court’s opinion to possess the ability, standing at the Bar or special knowledge, experience in law. So, being a senior advocate is considered a privilege.

It Is a saying that great power comes with great responsibility. The same goes for the designation of a senior advocate. They are responsible for acting as a role model for junior members in the profession. They are subject to certain restrictions imposed by the Bar Council of India. When an advocate gets designated as a senior advocate, he should communicate it to the High Court and the secretary of the State Bar Council and Bar Council of India.

Advocates Roll

Section 17 of the Advocates Act provides that every State Bar Council shall prepare and maintain the roll of advocates.

The roll gets prepared in two parts, and the first part contains the list of senior advocates and the second part contains the list of other advocates. When more than one advocate gets enrolled in a single day, their names in the state roll is added according to the seniority.

In the Advocates roll following details are mentioned:

A person cannot get enrolled in more than one Bar Council. But, he can transfer his name from one state to another state roll-on genuine grounds.

Certificate of Enrolment

Section 22 of the Advocates Act, 1961 provides the provision for the Certificate of Enrolment. According to this section, a certificate should get issued for the enrolment of an advocate.

The certificate is issued in the prescribed form provided by the State Bar Council. Any change made in the place of permanent address of the person is to get notified to the concerned State Bar Council within ninety days.

Qualification to be enrolled in State Roll

Section 24 of the Advocates Act provides qualifications required for a person to get enrolled as an advocate. The qualification prescribed for the enrolment in the state roll are as follows:

Various committee

Constitution of Special Committee when there was no election

  1. Constitution of Special Committee

Section 8A of the Act provides the Constitution of Special Committee in the absence of an election. A special committee gets formed when a State Bar Council fails to conduct the election of its member. The special committee consists of:

Section 9 of the act provides that the Bar Council should constitute one or more disciplinary committees. The disciplinary committee consists of 3 members elected by the bar council, and the senior-most member is the chairman of the committee.

Section 9A of the Advocates Act provides the constitution of the Legal Aid Committee. The bar council can constitute one or more legal aid committees, and the legal aid committee has a minimum of five and a maximum of nine members.

Section 10 grants power to the State Bar Council and Bar Council of India.

State Bar Council should constitute the following committee:

Bar Council of India should constitute the following standing committee:

State bar council and the bar council of India can constitute other committees among its members as it deems necessary.

According to Section 13, no action done by the Bar Council or any other committee can get questioned due to any vacancy or a defect of the constitution of the committee.

Rights of Advocate

Right to Pre-Audience: Section 23 of the Advocates Act, 1961 provides the privilege of reight to pre-audience to the advocate. The right of pre-audience is a right of being heard before another. This right is available in the given hierarchy:

In the hierarchy mentioned above, starting from the Attorney General of India to have the right of pre-audience and at last, the right is available to other advocates. According to this section, the advocate has the right to represent the case in court, and he can speak when he wants before an audience is present in the court and cannot be stopped from speaking unless he violates the decency of the court.

Punishment for misconduct

Section 35 of the Advocates Act provides punishment for an advocate for misconduct. This section provides that when a complaint is received, or State Bar Council has the reason to believe that an advocate on a roll is guilty of professional misconduct, the matter gets referred to the Disciplinary Committee for disposal. The disciplinary committee then decided the date of the hearing. The notice gets served to the concerned advocate and the Advocate – General of the State.

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