Venkatalakshmamma vs The Tahsildar — 1199/2025

Case under 13 Clause 3 and 14 of Birth and Death Act 1969. Disposed: Uncontested--ALLOWED OTHERWISE on 17th March 2026.

Case disposed

Crl.Misc. - CRIMINAL MISC.CASES

CNR: KABR420121322025

Filing Number

1212/2025

Filing Date

20-Dec-2025

Registration No

1199/2025

Registration Date

20-Dec-2025

Court

PRL. CIVIL JUDGE AND JMFC, DODBALLAPUR

Judge

99-Addl. CIVIL Judge And JMFC

Decision Date

17-Mar-2026

Nature of Disposal

Uncontested--ALLOWED OTHERWISE

Last updated 18-Jun-2026

Acts & Sections

13 Clause 3 and 14 of Birth and Death Act 1969

Petitioner(s)

  1. 1.Venkatalakshmamma

    Adv. AMBAREESHA C

Respondent(s)

  1. 1.The Tahsildar

Case History

  1. Case disposedDisposed

  2. 17-Mar-2026

    OrdersView PDF

    The court allowed Venkatalakshmamma's petition seeking registration of her mother-in-law's death (27.09.1965) and issuance of a death certificate under Section 13(3) of the Registration of Birth and Death Act, 1969. The court found the petitioner's case credible based on unchallenged evidence, including family tree affidavits and public notice, and directed the Tahsildar to register the death and issue the certificate, recognizing that lack of awareness caused the initial failure to register and that a death certificate is essential for legal purposes. This case analysis is maintained by casestatus.in based on publicly available court records.

  3. 17-Mar-2026

    Disposed

    Addl. CIVIL Judge And JMFC

  4. 27-Feb-2026

    DepositionView PDF

  5. 27-Feb-2026

    Orders.

    Addl. CIVIL Judge And JMFC

  6. 17-Jan-2026

    Notice

    Prl. CIVIL Judge And JMFC

  7. 16-Jan-2026

    First hearing

    Initial hearing scheduled

  8. 20-Dec-2025

    Case filed

    Registration No. 1199/2025

casestatus.in Summary

The court allowed Venkatalakshmamma's petition seeking registration of her mother-in-law's death (27.09.1965) and issuance of a death certificate under Section 13(3) of the Registration of Birth and Death Act, 1969. The court found the petitioner's case credible based on unchallenged evidence, including family tree affidavits and public notice, and directed the Tahsildar to register the death and issue the certificate, recognizing that lack of awareness caused the initial failure to register and that a death certificate is essential for legal purposes. This case analysis is maintained by casestatus.in based on publicly available court records.

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