Hindustan Times ST (Mumbai)

Centre, Kerala govt at odds over sending Sabarimala queries to larger SC bench

- Murali Krishnan

NEWDELHI:THE Union and the Kerala government­s opposed each other in the Supreme Court on Thursday regarding the reference to a larger bench of legal questions surroundin­g the entry of women into the Sabarimala temple.

The bench reserved its verdict, saying an order will be pronounced on Monday.

“To say that reference was not possible because it was a review petition is absurd. Technicali­ties should not come in Your Lordships’ way to discharge justice for posterity,” the Centre’ second senior-most law officer, solicitor general Tushar Mehta told the court.

However, senior counsel Jaideep Gupta, representi­ng the Kerala government, opposed the reference. “In a review, the court can only look into whether there is an error apparent on the face of record,” Gupta argued. A ninejudge bench of the top court heard the limited issue of whether a bench of the Supreme Court, while hearing a review petition, can refer questions of law to a larger bench.

The Centre and Kerala government have also been at loggerhead­s regarding the Citizenshi­p (Amendment) Act, or CAA -with the state even filing a petition in the Supreme Court last month challengin­g the contentiou­s central law. That petition is yet to be heard by the Supreme Court.

On November 14, 2019, a fivejudge bench that heard the Sabarimala review petitions framed seven questions to be answered by a larger bench, resulting in the constituti­on of a nine-judge bench. When the bench assembled on February 3 to finalise the issues to be heard by it, senior counsel Fali Nariman, appearing for one of the petitioner­s, disputed the jurisdicti­on of the five-judge bench to frame legal questions and refer the case to a larger bench. He argued that the jurisdicti­on vested with Supreme Court while exercising the powers of review is very limited. A review bench, he argued, can only correct errors in the judgment which is being reviewed; it cannot frame legal issues and refer it to a larger bench.

The nine-judge bench then decided to assemble on Thursday to first settle the issue raised by Nariman before proceeding with the hearing.

Solicitor general Tushar Mehta told the court on Thursday that the power of the Supreme Court to refer matters to a larger bench is unfettered irrespecti­ve of whether the court is hearing a review petition or a curative petition.

Mehta also cited the case on Section 377 of IPC, in which fresh petitions by Navtej Singh Johar and others were entertaine­d by the court and referred to a Constituti­on bench even though curative petition against a 2013 judgment in which the court had upheld the validity of Section 377 was still pending. The court eventually struck down Section 377 in the fresh petitions by Johar.

Jaideep Gupta, however, argued that the scope of review jurisdicti­on is very limited. In a review petition, he submitted, the court can only look into whether there is an apparent error in the judgment which is being reviewed. Besides, the same has to be considered depending on the law as it existed when the main case was being heard.

If there is a subsequent change in law, that cannot impact the review. “If in reference SC changes the law, then parties will ask for new law to be applied in review. That can’t be allowed because review should be decided only on error apparent as law stood when main case was heard. Based on a subsequent change in law, an earlier case will not be reopened,” Gupta said.

The CJI, in his observatio­ns, appeared to weigh in favour of the Centre, saying that reference of legal questions by a five-judge bench of SC to a larger bench was only a procedural innovation and did not prejudicia­lly affect anybody’s rights.

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