Summary of Article 370 Judgment - 231211 - 122556
Summary of Article 370 Judgment - 231211 - 122556
Summary of Article 370 Judgment - 231211 - 122556
1. There are three judgments of this Court – one authored by the CJI for
himself, for Justice Gavai and Justice Surya Kant. There is a concurring opinion
authored by Justice Kaul. Justice Sanjiv Khanna has concurred with both the
judgments.
2. The reference before the Constitution Bench raises the following questions
for determination:
Assembly of the State referred to in clause (3) of Article 370 by the words
c. Whether the entire Constitution of India could have been applied to the
370(1)(d);
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e. Whether the proclamation of the Governor dated 20 June 2018 in
g. Whether the Jammu and Kashmir Reorganisation Act 2019 by which the
State of Jammu and Kashmir was bifurcated into two Union Territories
Parliament;
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suspended animation the status of the State of Jammu and Kashmir as
a State under Article 1(3)(a) of the Constitution and its conversion into a
power.
valid:
a. We have held that this Court need not adjudicate on the validity of the
Proclamations because:
i. the pleadings of the petitioners in the writ petitions indicate that their
such an action could have been taken during President’s rule; and
ii. even if this Court holds that the Proclamation could not have been
issued under Article 356, there would be no material relief which can
be given in view of the fact that President’s Rule was revoked in the
petitioners have assailed the specific actions which were taken when
the Proclamation was in force on the ground that those actions breach
challenges which form the fulcrum of the case of the petitioners have
been considered.
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4. Whether there are limitations on the exercise of power by President or
We have held that there are limitations on the power which can be exercised by
the Union Government in the State when a Proclamation under Article 356. We
a. The majority in SR Bommai (supra) held that the actions taken by the
the President after the issuance of the Proclamation. Justice Sawant applied
the standard of whether the exercise of power was mala fide or palpably
irrational. Justice Reddy observed that the advisability and necessity of the
textual and purposive reading of Article 356 in particular and Part XVIII as a
whole. We hold that there are limitations on the power exercisable after a
Proclamation under Article 356 is issued. The following are our reasons:
i. The thread that runs through Part XVIII of the Constitution when read
are required to handle an emergency under Articles 352 and 356. This
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ii. Article 356(1) states that the President may by a Proclamation
assume or declare the powers stipulated in clauses (a), (b), and (c) of
Article 356(1). The powers stipulated in clauses (a), (b), and (c) of
iii. Article 356(1)(a) does not opt for an all or none formula. The phrase
“all or any” does not indicate that the Union Government can exercise
iv. Clauses (a), (b), and (c) of Article 356(1) grant the President
functions under clause (a) and declare under clause (b) that the
Parliament;
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principle which runs through Article 356(1)(c) and which also guides
Proclamation; and
c. The following standard is laid down to assess actions under Article 356 after
i. The exercise of power by the President under Article 356 must have
ii. The person challenging the exercise of power must prima facie
a prima facie case is made, the onus shifts to the Union to justify that
the exercise of power had a reasonable nexus with the object of the
Proclamation; and
d. The argument of the petitioners that the Union Government cannot take
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Article 356 is in force is not accepted. The power of the Legislature of the
second Amendment) Act 1976. Before the amendment, the law to the extent
competent legislature is required for the law to cease to exist after the
for actions taken during the subsistence of the legislation. The observations
Ordinance can subsist even after the Ordinance ceases to exist cannot be
has the effect of a law by its very nature has a limited life; and
e. The argument of the petitioner that Parliament can only assume the law-
making powers of the Legislature of the State when the Proclamation under
Article 356 is issued is not accepted. The purpose of Article 357 is to ensure
that while exercising the powers of the legislature of the State pursuant to a
declaration under Article 356(1), Parliament, or as the case may be, the
under Article 356. Further, Article 357 does not contain a non-obstante
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plain terms of the Constitution do not provide. Aa held above, the exercise
review. An immunity from judicial scrutiny does not attach to the exercise of
Proclamation.
We have held that the State of Jammu and Kashmir did not retain an element of
sovereignty when it joined the Union of India. We have arrived at this conclusion
Singh provided that nothing in the Instrument would affect the continuance
that the Constitution of India would not only supersede all other
constitutional provisions in the State which were inconsistent with it but also
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Proclamation reflects the full and final surrender of sovereignty by Jammu
and Kashmir, through its sovereign ruler, to India – to her people who are
sovereign;
c. Neither the constitutional setup nor any other factors indicate that the State
of Jammu and Kashmir was only to further define the relationship between
the Union of India and the State of Jammu and Kashmir. The relationship
was already defined by the IoA, the Proclamation issued by Yuvraj Karan
in its Preamble that the people of India resolved to constitute India into a
e. That the State of Jammu and Kashmir became an integral part of the Union
unamendable;
India read with the First Schedule as well as Article 370 indicate in no
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g. All States in the country have legislative and executive power albeit to
Constitution. The State of Jammu and Kashmir does not have ‘internal
h. The limited question before the Constitution Bench in Prem Nath Kaul
(supra) was whether the Monarch held plenary legislative powers after the
State but before the Constitution of Jammu and Kashmir was adopted. A
integration with the Dominion of India did not arise in that case.
a. To answer this issue we had to decide on two issues. One, whether Article
Article 370(3);
serve two purposes. First, the transitional purpose: to provide for an interim
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arrangement until the Constituent Assembly of the State was formed and
other than the ones stipulated in the Instrument of Accession, and ratify the
view of the special circumstances because of the war conditions in the State;
c. We have held that a textual reading of Article 370 also indicates that it is a
the provision in Part XXI of the Constitution which deals with temporary and
“temporary provisions with respect to the State of Jammu and Kashmir”, and
a reading of Articles 370 and 1 by which the State became an integral part
370(3): we have held that the power of the President under Article 370(3) to
issue a notification declaring that Article 370 ceases to exist subsists even
after the dissolution of the Constituent Assembly of Jammu and Kashmir for
Indian States could ratify the Constitution of India. The Ruler of each
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the Constitution. When a Constituent Assembly was convened in
ii. At the time of the framing of the Constitution of India, it was obviously
Kashmir was formed for framing the Constitution for the State. It was
exist, only one of the special circumstances for which the provision
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Assembly ceased to exist. This is recognised by the judgment of the
iv. The effect of the President declaring under Clause 370(3) that Article
to every other State in the First Schedule would equally apply to the
and not disintegration. So, the power under Article 370(1)(d) and
Article 370(3) even when exercised to its fullest extent does not freeze
the State of Jammu and Kashmir. Holding that the power under Article
Article 370(3) would become redundant and would lose its temporary
character.
e. The President while deciding if the power under Article 370(3) must be
solution in the form of Article 370 have ceased to exist. This is a policy
decision which completely falls within the realm of the executive. The Court
cannot sit in appeal over the decision of the President on whether the special
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circumstances which led to the arrangement under Article 370 have ceased
to exist. However, the decision is not beyond the scope of judicial review. It
is settled law that the exercise of executive power can be challenged on the
Constitution and applying provisions with modification indicate that over the
course of the last seventy years, the Union and the State have through a
This is not a case where only Articles 1 and 370 of the Constitution were
applied to the State of Jammu and Kashmir and suddenly after seventy
years the entire Constitution was being made applicable. The continuous
exercise of power under Article 370(1) by the President indicates that the
President’s exercise of power under Article 370(3) was mala fide. Having
concluded that the power under Article 370(3) subsisted even after the
7. The challenge to CO 272 on the ground that the power under Article
370(1)(d) cannot be used to apply all provisions of the Constitution to the State of
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We have held that all provisions of the Constitution can be applied to Jammu and
Kashmir through the exercise of power under Article 370(1)(d). The power under
Article 370(1)(d) can be used to apply one provision, more than one provision, an
entire Part of the Constitution, or all the provisions of the Constitution (that is, the
entire Constitution). The provision does not make a distinction between one or all
because the CO 272 applies all provisions of the Constitution to Jammu and
8. The challenge to CO 272 on the ground that the President could not have
secured the concurrence of the Union Government under the second proviso to
Article 370(1)(d)
a. We have held that the President seeking the concurrence of the Union
invalid because:
i. The effect of applying all the provisions of the Constitution to the State
notifying that Article 370 shall cease to exist. That is, all provisions of
the Constitution of India will apply to the State of Jammu and Kashmir,
except for the fact that the former can be reversed while the latter
cannot;
ii. Consultation and collaboration between both the units will only be
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Constitution to the State would require amendments to the State
Constitution of India;
iii. Since the effect of applying all the provisions of the Constitution to
(which the President has the power to unilaterally issue), the principle
iv. The exercise of power is mala fide only if power was exercised with
of the State Government was not required for the exercise of power
9. The challenge to CO 272 on the ground that it is ultra vires Article 370(1)(d)
applies to Jammu and Kashmir had the effect of amending Article 370 and is
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thus ultra vires Article 370(1)(d). We have reached this conclusion for the
following reasons:
ii. A change can be said to have been made even if the language of
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b. An assessment of whether a Constitutional Order amounts to a ‘modification’
c. The effect of a provision of law is as important as its form. While the change
amend Article 370 itself. CO 272 changes the language to the proviso to
Article 370(3) in two ways. First, it changes the recommending body from
these changes are not insignificant because they modify the essential
the specific procedure laid down for its amendment. This would defeat the
Article 367 were clarificatory and consequential. They did not have the effect
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10. The status of the Constitution of Jammu and Kashmir:
India were filled by the Constitution of the State. After the abrogation of
Article 370 (as it stood before the issuance of CO 272 and CO 273) and
the application of the entirety of the Constitution of India to the State, the
Constitution of the State does not fulfil any purpose or serve any
11. On the validity of Parliament’s exercise of power under the first proviso to
Article 3
A five-Judge Bench of this Court in Babulal Parate held that the views
expressed by the State Legislature under the proviso to Article 3 are not
Parliament (which is not the case), there would be scope for debate on
substituted its views for the views of the Legislative Assembly of the State.
However, the views of the Legislature of the State are not binding on
Parliament in terms of the first proviso to Article 3. The views of the Legislature
of the State under the first proviso to Article 3 are recommendatory to begin
with. Thus, Parliament’s exercise of power under the first proviso to Article 3
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12. On the validity of the Suspension of the second proviso to Article 3 as
When the Reorganisation Bill was introduced, that is 5 August 2019, the second
proviso to Article 3 as it applied to the State of Jammu and Kashmir ceased to exist
because of CO 272. Thus, the issue of whether the second proviso to Article 3
could have been suspended in exercise of the power under Article 356(1)(c) does
not survive.
13. The validity of the Jammu and Kashmir Reorganisation Act 2019:
a. The Solicitor General (for the Union of India) submitted that statehood
will be restored to Jammu and Kashmir and that its status as a Union
separation of a territory from any State. This Court is alive to the security
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steps shall be taken by the Election Commission of India to conduct
possible.
this Court must construe the scope of powers under Article 3 in light of
14. In view of the above discussion, the following are the conclusions:
a. The State of Jammu and Kashmir does not retain any element of
sovereignty after the execution of the IoA and the issuance of the
was adopted. The State of Jammu and Kashmir does not have ‘internal
under Section 92 of the Jammu and Kashmir Constitution and Article 356
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of the Indian Constitution until the special status of Jammu and Kashmir
by the President must have a reasonable nexus with the object of the
a prima facie case is made, the onus shifts to the Union to justify the
Article 370 and the placement of Article 370 in Part XXI of the Constitution
f. The power under Article 370(3) did not cease to exist upon the
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Constituent Assembly to make its recommendations ceased to exist. It did
not affect the power held by the President under Article 370(3);
issue CO 272 is not mala fide. The President in exercise of power under
Article 370(3) can unilaterally issue a notification that Article 370 ceases
to exist. The President did not have to secure the concurrence of the
power under Article 370(3) for which the concurrence or collaboration with
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India to the State of Jammu and Kashmir is valid. Such an exercise of
power is not mala fide merely because all the provisions were applied
l. The views of the Legislature of the State under the first proviso to
under the first proviso to Article 3 under the Proclamation was valid and
Kashmir will be restored (except for the carving out of the Union Territory
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into two Union Territories of Ladakh and Jammu and Kashmir is
decision to carve out the Union Territory of Ladakh in view of Article 3(a)
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