roadzn
5 / 5
0%
+25 KM~5 min

Quiz: Rights Master

You know your rights at a traffic stop. You know which documents to show, which to protect. You can tell a compoundable challan from a non-compoundable one, spot an unlawful seizure threat, and ask the right questions without flinching. Now prove it. Five questions. Rights Master status awaits.

Anita shows her driving licence stored in DigiLocker on her phone. The officer says this is not acceptable and demands the original plastic card. Is the officer correct?

Tap an option to reveal the answer

Kumar receives an e-challan via SMS for a signal violation captured on camera. He wants to pay it. Which platform should he use?

Tap an option to reveal the answer

Which of the following is a non-compoundable traffic offence requiring a mandatory court appearance?

Tap an option to reveal the answer

Divya's car is being seized. The officer is about to take her vehicle. What document must Divya insist on receiving before the vehicle is taken?

Tap an option to reveal the answer

A traffic officer stops Rahul but does not show his identity card or badge number when asked. Rahul is in plainclothes. What right does Rahul have?

Tap an option to reveal the answer

✅ Key takeaways

  • DigiLocker is legally valid at traffic stops — no officer can demand a physical original when a digital version is shown.
  • Pay e-challans online at parivahan.gov.in or Umang app within 60 days to avoid court proceedings.
  • Drunk driving is non-compoundable — only a court can resolve it; refuse any cash settlement offer.
  • Demand a written seizure memo every time — no memo means the seizure has no legal standing.
  • Only uniformed officers can stop you under MVA s.130 — asking for officer identity is your legal right, not a provocation.

Lawful provides legal information, not legal advice.