PETITIONS FILED AGAINST GUJARAT PROHIBITION ACT MAINTAINABLE, SAYS HIGH COURT
AHMEDABAD: The Gujarat HC on Monday held as maintainable a batch of petitions challenging the provisions of Gujarat Prohibition Act, 1949 which bans the manufacture, sale and consumption of liquor in the state.
A division bench of Chief Justice Vikram Nath and Justice Biren Vaishnav said the court holds the petitions as “maintainable and be heard and decided on merits,” and kept them for final hearing on October 12.
The HC, thereby, rejected preliminary objections raised by the state government regarding the maintainability of the petitions. Advocate General Kamal Trivedi hinted before the HC that the government may decide to approach the SC against the order. The government had maintained that it is not permissible for a court to examine the validity of any law or any new law or additional grounds when it has been upheld by the apex court in the past. The SC had upheld the Act in its judgment in 1951. In his submission, Trivedi had said a law which has been made valid by the SC today can be held invalid tomorrow, but the apex court is the right forum to decide the same and not the Gujarat HC. The petitioners had argued that the matter should be taken up on merits, as the provisions challenged in the pleas are materially different from what they were in 1951 as they have been amended over the years. The HC had, on June 23, reserved its order on the maintainability of a batch of petitions challenging the provisions of the state’s liquor prohibition law as contrary to the citizen’s rights to privacy as enshrined in the Constitution.