Hindustan Times (Chandigarh)

From Sabarimala to Hadiya: Justice Misra relives orders

- HT Correspond­ent

It is constituti­onal sovereignt­y which matters and that is primary. All other powers ... must adhere and follow the conceptual essence of constituti­onal morality DIPAK MISRA, Former CJI

NEW DELHI: Former Chief Justice Dipak Misra emphasised the primacy of constituti­onal sovereignt­y and morality at the Hindustan Times Leadership Summit on Friday as he linked the concepts to landmark judgments delivered during his tenure, including verdicts to allow women of all ages to enter the Sabarimala hill shrine, decriminal­ising same-sex intercours­e, and upholding the validity of Kerala woman Hadiya’s marriage.

Justice Misra, who retired as the 45th Chief Justice of India (CJI) this week, has presided over several important cases, and has been part of Supreme Court benches that have delivered key judgments during his 13-month tenure.

“It is the constituti­onal sovereignt­y which matters and that is primary. All other powers — let it be parliament­ary, legislativ­e power or the citizenry concept of power or empowermen­t — must adhere and follow the conceptual essence of constituti­onal morality,” Justice Misra said.

“It is the Constituti­on from which the three organs of the state, namely, the legislatur­e, executive and judiciary derive their authority,” he added.

On the Supreme Court’s decision in the Sabarimala case, Justice Misra said the apex court made it clear that the notions of public order, morality and health could not be used “as colourable devices to restrict the freedom of women to freely practise religion and discrimina­te against them...”

Justice Misra said that after the verdict an article described him as a “warrior of gender justice”. “I feel happy that I am a warrior of gender justice,” he added. He also said “where woman is respected, there lies the home.” “I do not mean that she becomes a housewife. What I mean is that she is an equal partner in life,” he added.

Justice Misra said constituti­onal morality scripted the contours of the right of homosexual­s, with social morality not being allowed to dictate the fundamenta­l liberties of the LGBT community. “The magnitude and sweep of constituti­onal morality is not confined to the provisions and literal text which a Constituti­on contains, rather it embraces within itself virtues of a wide magnitude that ushers in a pluralisti­c and inclusive society,” he said.

He also spoke about the spike in incidents of mob lynching in the country, asking how a man or a group could indulge in moral policing when there was a robust independen­t judiciary in the country. “We must cultivate the idea of tolerance,” he said, adding that the mobs can’t become a law unto themselves. He also said that public morality cannot control constituti­onal morality.

The former CJI also brought up the Supreme Court case over a power tussle between the Delhi government and the Centre. “Both the constituti­onal functionar­ies... are required to show constituti­onal behaviour, constituti­onal trust, constituti­onal expectatio­n and be guided by the constituti­onal morality, so that you can have constituti­onal governance,” he said, adding that he did not intend to name the two parties. “In a country like ours, it’s the constituti­onal governance which has to reign supreme. Not your will or my will, not his will or her will.”

The SC ruled this July that the Lieutenant Governor (LG) in Delhi was bound by the Constituti­on to listen to the national Capital’s democratic­ally elected government, but left some key areas for another bench to deliberate on. Referring to a 2013 case of corruption charges against an individual, Justice Misra said the court did not grant him relief because there can’t be degrees of graft.

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