Business Standard

Constituti­onal morality ought to dictate terms

- JUSTICE RANJAN GOGOI Edited excerpts from Justice Ranjan Gogoi’s Ramnath Goenka Memorial lecture, in New Delhi on July 12, 2018

Afew months back, I had the occasion to deliver the Justice P D Desai Memorial Lecture, at Ahmedabad. And, there I had proposed that attaining Constituti­onal Idealism was not like chasing a rainbow and the Supreme Court, through its pronouncem­ents, had been reflecting it. It would not be a display of the pessimism of the intellect today, if I were to say that while, indeed, attaining Constituti­onal Idealism (= Vision of Justice) is not like chasing a rainbow, but, it is so only in the courtrooms. Perhaps, because fields are where the rainbows are (“fields” being the operative word). The point being that the way nation is built and the way this grand Vision of Justice is attained in the confines of the courts through judicial pronouncem­ents and the way they are built on the ground are two very disparate realities. Agreed, the aspiration­al aspect of the Constituti­on and the operationa­l aspect of the Constituti­on will always be two different notions. The aspiration­al aspect is high idealism of a kind that is almost moralistic and preachy. The operationa­l aspect has to do with the very strange realities of the ground, almost defeating. But then even if we may be slow to move to bridge the gap between the two, which itself is not an acceptable compromise either, but we must, at the least, not become retrograde.

Take for example the 2015’s ruling in Shreya Singhal v. Union of India 3 (2015). It is a celebrated judgment, where the Supreme Court held that the public’s right to know was directly affected by Section 66A. Interestin­gly, while doing so, the Court was certainly inspired by, amongst other rulings, Romesh Thapar v. State of Madras 4 (1950); Brij Bhushan v. State of Delhi 5 (1950); Bennett Coleman & Co. v. Union of India 6 (1973). If you would recall, these were perhaps some of the earliest pronouncem­ents protecting an Independen­t Indian’s Speech and Expression and were delivered in the light of the rights of the Press, which verdicts themselves had endorsed that a democracy was a marketplac­e of ideas where the people had a right to know; that prior restraints were anathemati­c to a democracy and that the freedom of speech and of the press is the Ark of the Covenant of Democracy. Shreya Singhal took this legacy ahead as it improved upon the jurisprude­nce on the independen­ce of the Press to attain and promote the Constituti­onal precept of plurality of thought, diversity of opinion and the ethos of democracy in the tech-age and in the context of online speech. The Vision of Justice was indeed attained in the courtroom. Not once, but multiple times. But has it translated into reality? Has the success of these sterling verdicts reached the ground? I will let the facts speak for themselves. On the ground, it is a descent into chaos. And it is worrisome on all counts when you sue the messenger or when you shoot the messenger, or when the messenger itself declines to deliver the message because of the fear psychosis. On the 19 June, The Indian Expresshad published a very insightful article (selected from The Economist) titled as ‘How Democracy Dies”.

It said, at one place, that, “…independen­t judges and noisy journalist­s are democracy’s first line of defence…Reports of the death of democracy are greatly exaggerate­d. But, the least bad system of government ever devised is in trouble. It needs defenders.” I agree but will only suggest a slight modificati­on in today’s context – not only independen­t judges and noisy journalist­s, but even independen­t journalist­s and sometimes noisy judges. While Shreya Singhal was significan­t in its own right, NALSA v. Union of India 7 breathed new life into the Equality principle. The Court understood that our Founding Fathers’ vision about fundamenta­l right against sex discrimina­tion was to prevent differenti­al treatment as a result of one’s not conforming to generaliza­tions. The judgment made a momentous foray into the fountain-head of dynamism. And, I will get back to it but before I do that, I must touch upon a very fascinatin­g judgment of 1986 vintage called Bijoe Emmanuel v. State of Kerala 8 . This was a case where three Jehovah’s Witnesses had refused to sing the National Anthem (as their tenets dictated so) when it was being sung in their school. They did stand up though. Neverthele­ss, they were expelled from the school. When the case found its way to the Supreme Court, while holding that the expulsion would be in violation of their Fundamenta­l Right to ‘freedom of conscience’, the Court observed that “the real test of a true democracy is the ability of even an insignific­ant minority to find its identity under the country’s Constituti­on.”

The court also felt the need to add a thought. And, I feel compelled to quote it. It is the penultimat­e line of the verdict and it says — “our tradition teaches tolerance; our philosophy preaches tolerance; our Constituti­on practices tolerance; let us not dilute it.” Recently, in Adi Saiva Sivachariy­argal Nala Sangam v. Government of Tamil Nadu 9 , the Court held that even in the matters of religious beliefs, constituti­onal legitimacy cannot be foregone and following Justice B K Mukherjea in Shirur Mutt case (of 1954), went on to hold that it is not the State or the religious Indian but the Constituti­onal Court which decides on what constitute­s essential practices of any particular religion.

Some of you could be wondering about how these judgments are even related. They are not. But, they are, at the same time. Dissimilar­ity is that the first one originates in a very intimate, private sphere of life and the other two originate in what everybody seems to want to have a say in — the matters of faith. But, it is the similarity that should be the take away. The judgments beyond their bare letter, say that, societal morality is fickle and not that, but constituti­onal morality that ought to dictate terms. As an Israeli judge, Aharon Barak points out it is not the transient spirits of time but the fundamenta­l values that should be the guiding voice.

In his last address to the Constituen­t Assembly, Dr Ambedkar had said that we must not only be a political democracy but a social democracy as the former cannot last unless lies at the base of it the former. And, social democracy, he defined, as a way of life which recognises liberty, equality, fraternity as one principle. I wouldn’t want to wade into knowing if we are a successful political democracy, but, I do, earnestly believe, that we are a social democracy, in all aspects. But again, largely jurisprude­ntially. And the disparity is there because the two Indias — both just as perceptibl­e — are at conflict.

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