The Criminal Law (Amendment) Act, 1938, framed just before the World War-II that started a year later, is one of the 73 obsolete laws recommended by the Law Commission for repeal, taking the number of such laws to 258.
The law provided for punishment of certain acts prejudicial to the recruitment of persons to serve in the armed forces of the Union.
It was enacted to punish persons who made public speeches to dissuade people from enlisting in the defence forces and from taking part in any war in which the British Empire was engaged.
Another Act recommended for repeal is the Hindu Inheritance (Removal of Disabilities) Act, 1928.
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It provides that no person governed by Hindu law would be excluded from any right or share in joint family property by reason only of any disease, deformity, or physical or mental defect. However, the Act excluded a person who had been from "birth a lunatic or an idiot".
In its third interim report submitted to the Law Ministry, the panel recommended repeal of 73 more Acts. In its three reports to the government, it has recommended repeal of 258 laws which are clogging the statute books as they have lost their relevance.