8 Ridiculous Times People Took Gods To The Court

Admin 01-Mar-2016 15:36:57 Inothernews

8 Ridiculous Times People Took Gods To The Court


Some people have all the time in the world. When lawyers are tired of suing each other, some get so bored, they actually go and sue a God. And you may think that they are just kidding, but no. They actually pursue the case with the vigour they should show in cases that actually matter. What is more impressive is that our judicial system actually tolerates lawyers like these and lets them waste precious court time, as if they didn’t have millions of cases in backlog. Here are some of the most frivolous of the lawsuits ever. When Hanuman was taken to court for occupying government land: A roadside Hanuman temple was encroaching on a road in Bihar, causing traffic jams. So, the district magistrate prepared paperwork for a court summons, which was carried by a clerk to the temple. Guess what the clerk did. He went and stuck the court summons on Hanuman’s statue – bang on his chest. That was probably the first time Hanuman was summoned by a court for a hearing perhaps. The court obviously realized its mistake and termed the whole fiasco as a “clerical error”.



When Lord Rama was given legal notice for being a sexist misogynist

Chandan Singh, a Hindu himself, decided, that one fine day, after a good read of Ramayana, will sue Rama.

No, not Rama, his next door neighbor, but Rama – the god in Ramayana. The reason? Rama mistreated his wife Sita.

Yes, Mr. Singh, the whole universe was waiting for you to file a court case after so many years, just because Sita could finally get justice.

Needless to say, the court deemed the case impractical, which is a euphemism for bullshit.

When

When Rama and Hanuman were given court summons because they failed to reply

Two temples – one of Rama, and one of Hanuman were locked in a legal territorial dispute. The logical conclusion would have been to get the temple owners into the court and get the case settled.

But no. Apparently both Rama and Hanuman were summoned by the court and were also given legal notices when they failed to appear during the first summons.

The case is still in court.

When

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