MINUTES OF THE
CLASS
Art 13
Introduction to
constitutional judicial review:
· It
lays down the procedure of judicial review to be followed when Part III of the
constitution is violated. This procedure of Article 13 is called constitutional
judicial review.
Constitutional
judicial review is different from normal judicial review.
· In
constitutional judicial review, judges don’t just interpret the act, but they
have the power to strike down an act itself.
What can be
done to override the judiciary in a constitutional matter? Propose an
amendment.
Art 37
Why are
Fundamental Rights(FR) enforceable but Directive Principles of State
Policy(DPSP) non-enforceable?
· Article
37 of the Indian Constitution states that although DPSPs are of fundamental
value, they aren’t enforceable.
· DPSPs
are guidelines for the executive and the legislature.
Ninth schedule: Every piece
of legislation in ninth schedule falls outside the scope of constitutional
review (e.g. land reforms put into ninth schedule). This was used by Nehru for
land reforms, security laws during the emergency etc.
To what extent
does the ninth schedule links the Parliamentary Sovereignty (Article 31B).
Tussle between
the judiciary and legislature:
· Art
31 B - saving clauses- if specific legislation is for the
implementation of DPSP then constitutional judicial review is set aside. The
parliament is in charge and the judiciary cannot intervene.
· Nehru:
“No SC and no judiciary can stand in judgement over the sovereign will of the
Parliament. No judge can be a third chamber. The judiciary cannot come in the
way, and if it does, the whole Constitution is a creature of the Parliament.”
· Dr.
Ambedkar calms this tussle down by bringing the 2/3 rd majority rule.
Basic structure
even applies to ninth schedule, but it did not exist in 1950s
Parliamentary
Sovereignty V Constitutional Judicial Review (CJR)
· Discussion
on the two opposing models. UK follows parliamentary sovereignty. India opts
the power of Judicial Review, like the US.
· UK
depends solely on the parliament for the legislation (Parliamentary
Sovereignty only)
· It
gives power to the parliament to do what it wants. Everything starts by the
word of the parliament
· In
1688, The parliament of UK made itself sovereign. Which meant that anything
that happened from now on had to go from the parliament and not the king- (What about
Brexit? Brits couldn’t come to terms with the overruling of the parliament by
the European CJ which affected their parliamentary sovereignty)
Constitutional
Judicial Review (CJR) born in the USA
US Constitution
-1789 after the Boston Tea Party
· US
came with the idea of Fundamental Rights and adopted the federal structure.
· The
constitution of the USA does not have anything like Art 32 or Art 13.
· So,
how do they enforce their right in the USA? They will point to the
precedent (Marbury V Madison)
· It
was an innovation brought by judges.
· Justice
John Marshall in Marbury V Madison, invented the principle
wherein SC of the USA declared an act unconstitutional. Marshall developed an
idea of unconstitutionality of acts passed by the legislature.
India has
borrowed this from the constitution of the United States
What about
other countries?
Australia-
doesn’t have a bill of rights. They have to depend upon the Australian
parliament.
· Parliamentary
Sovereignty V CJR in India:
· The
Parliament needs 2/3rd majority in India to change the
constitution.
· During
the Nehruvian era, judges of the SC did not pass any law which invited
constitutional amendment because then their judgement would turn void.
· Getting
2/3rd majority was easy back then. In contemporary times, there
will be no amendment as it is difficult to get 2/3rd majority.
· The
meaning of Article 13 and Article 32 changes dramatically because the
Parliament loses the power to make amendments.
Juristocracy:
· It
is a trend around the world that the courts are becoming more and more
powerful- juristocracy taking the place of judicial activism
· The
way an apex court decides is the way how the policy goes.
Indian SC said
to be the most powerful court in the world
Q. What about
personal laws? Do they fall under the scrutiny of judicial activism?
A. Personal
laws in India are governed separately and are not governed under constitution.
MINUTES OF THE
PRESENTATION
ART 13
Ø In
a nutshell, Any law in force presently or past inconsistence shall be
void/invalid.
Ø Art
13(1) is prospective in nature.
Ø All
pre-constitution or existing laws shall be void only if they are inconsistent
with the FR enshrined in part III
1. Doctrine
of retrospective application
Keshava Madhava Menon v State of Bombay 1951
Indian Press Emergency Powers Act 1931- curbing of
freedom of speech and expression-aimed at the freedom fighters- interest of
colonial state is to serve the interests of the colonial state- not to give
them rights and justice. In 1950- constitution came into force- this Act
becomes void
While prosecution under the Act was going on, the
constitution came into force and the validity of the Act was challenged.
Held:
Ø FR
including freedom of speech and expression, were granted for the first time by
constitution.
Ø When
the proceedings were initiated the appellant did not enjoy these rights
Ø Court
will look to general rule of statutory interpretation- (which is wrong cause
constitution is not a statute)- Court holds -unless an Act mentions that it is
retrospective- every statute is prima facieprospective
Ø Art
13(1) provides Pre-constitutional laws that were inconsistent with FR are
void and not void-ab-initio because of the prospective nature of Article 13(1)
What is the meaning and implication of the word
“void”? Void is not repealing of the statute.
Art 13(1) is prospective in nature. All
pre-constitution or existing laws shall be void only if they are inconsistent
with the FR enshrined in part III
2. Rule
of severability - the doctrine of severability means severing part of
a statute which is inconsistent with any constitutional provision.
Ø The
court looks at the intention behind the act.
Ø If
a particular section is separable then that section shall be separated.
Ø Analyze
the importance of a section w.r.t. intention of legislation.
Case- FN Balsara case on
Prohibition –
Facts: Severing some parts of the prohibition act -
section 12 (a) (b) (d), violation of Article 19 (1)g and Article 14.
Held: Even without these sections- the legislative
intent was upheld/entact.
The provisions of the Act which were declared as
void did not affect validity of the entire act and therefore there was no
necessity for invalidating the entire Act
Court not lay down any guidelines for severability-
but examining individual sections- however, in a 1957 case, R.M.D.C. v. Union of India, AIR [1957]
S.C. 628 laid down guidelines on severability
3. Doctrine
of Eclipse –
· The doctrine of
eclipse means that an existing law inconsistent with a Fundamental
Right, though becomes inoperative from the date of the commencement of
the Constitution, is not dead
altogether. It is overshadowed by the Fundamental Right and
remains dormant, but is not dead. The inconsistency (conflict) can be removed by constitutional amendment
to the relevant fundamental right so that eclipse vanishes and the entire law
becomes valid.
Cases:
(a) Bhikaji
Narayan V State of Maharashtra
Issue : The Constitutional Validity of the C. P and
Berar Motor Vehicles Act. The provision though valid when enacted, became void
when the constitution came into force in 1950 as it violated Art 19(1)(g). In
1951, clause (6) of Art 19 was amended.
Held: The amendment was to remove the shadow and to
make the impugned Act free from infirmity. This law was eclipsed for the time
being by FR. As soon as the eclipse is removed, the law begins to operate from
the date of such removal.
What’s the significance of Doctrine of Eclipse now?
We don’t expect judgements by SC to override these
days because there are coalition governments right now which means that special
majority is difficult to achieve.
Reservation- Madras HC held system of reservation
unconstitutional- still there is eclipse- overriding that judgement- act coming
into full force
If a law/judgement is declared unconstitutional not
necessary that it will be repealed Eclipse
overshadows any provision of a statute. Although the law exists in text, it is
not to be used in court proceedings.
(b) State
of Gujarat V Ambica Mills
In this case the SC extended the doctrine of
eclipse to post constitutional laws as well.
Unpaid accumulation violation of Article 19 (f)
Right to Property
Contentions: The unpaid accumulation is
representative of the property of the employees and hence the employees of
Ambica Mills challenged the appropriation by the State as violation of Article
19 (f) of Part III of the Fundamental Rights.
Held: A post Constitutional law infringing a FR
could also be valid in relation to those whose rights were not infringed upon.
Therefore, when a post constitutional law is void as it violates a FR
like Art 19 which is granted to citizens only, it does not mean it is void for
non-citizens too it would remain valid in relation to non-citizens.
4. Doctrine
of Waiver:
Ø It
states that a person can intentionally or with knowledge give up (or waive) his
rights.
Case
law: Bashesharnath v CIT: In the Indian constitution one
cannot waive FR.
Judgement
discussed in length about how the nature of Indian population, backward and
unaware of their rights. Allowing for a waiver of rights would amount to
injustice
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