India, July 13 -- Every monsoon, major Indian cities face a familiar crisis: waterlogged streets, collapsed infrastructure, massive traffic gridlocks, and tragic losses of life. While extreme weather sets the stage, the recurring chaos heavily exposes the systemic failures of local civic bodies.

Historically, when a city floods and someone drowns, the state easily passes the buck, blaming "unprecedented rainfall" or an "act of God."

However, the recent landmark Supreme Court judgment (Maniyar Iliyaz v. P. Ayyappan, June 19, 2026) has emerged as a massive game-changer. The case arose from the heartbreaking death of a 5-year-old child who was run over by a tanker because there was no footpath, forcing him and his father to walk directly o...