Hindustan Times ST (Mumbai) - Live

9-judge SC bench to look into ex-communicat­ion practice

- Utkarsh Anand

NEW DELHI: The Supreme Court on Friday referred a 36-year-old case challengin­g the practice of ex-communicat­ion in the Dawoodi Bohra community to a bench of nine judges to determine the scope of judicial review in matters of faith.

The ex-communicat­ion of a member would result in a social boycott, besides a bar on entering the places of worship.

The reference order was passed by a five-judge bench comjustice­s Sanjay Kishan Kaul, Sanjiv Khanna, AS Oka, Vikram Nath, and JK Maheshwari. This bench noted that a 1962 judgment by another five-judge required reconsider­ation by a larger bench. The 1962 judgment quashed a law that sought to prevent religious denominati­ons from ousting their members.

During the hearing of the case in October last year, Maharashtr­a submitted the case should be referred to a nine-judge bench, which is to adjudicate on the extent a constituti­onal court can go in matters of faith and religious practice. The nine-judge bench was formed to reconsider the court’s 2018 judgment allowing women of all ages to enter Kerala’s Sabarimala shrine. At that time, the court noted other petitions challengin­g practices in Islam, Christiani­ty, and other faiths were also pending adjudicati­on before it and decided to club all the cases. This bench is yet to commence the hearing of the matter.

Dawoodi Bohra’s spiritual head, the 53rd Syedna, opposed the plea for a reference to a ninejudge bench, arguing the proceedpri­sing do not survive anymore since the controvers­y revolved around the 1949 Bombay Prevention of Excommunic­ation Act, which was repealed by a Maharashtr­a law in 2017.

The Dawoodi Bohras have a long history of legal fights over ex-communicat­ion. The Bombay Prevention of Excommunic­ation Act was passed in November 1949. The community’s then spiritual head, the 51st Syedna, filed a petition against the law on behalf of Dawoodi Bohras. The plea said the power of ex-communicat­ion was one of the tools with which

Syedna managed the affairs of his sect. In 1962, a five-judge bench of the Supreme Court struck down the 1949 Act which sought to prevent religious denominati­ons from ousting a member of denominati­on.

In 1986, a writ petition was filed by the Central Board of Dawoodi Bohra Community, which is considered the representa­tive body of reformist Dawoodi Bohras.

The petition cited the findings of a commission headed by Justice Narendra Nathwani set up in 1977 to find out whether allegaings tions of social boycott by some families were true.

The commission, which submitted its report after two years, said the complaints were not unfounded and recommende­d that social boycotts be made illegal. In 1994, a two-judge bench directed the matter to be heard by a seven-judge bench. But in 2004, the court held the matter should be first examined by a five-judge bench to determine whether it requires a reference to a sevenjudge bench or not. The full order of the top court’s directive on Friday is yet to be uploaded.

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