The Free Press Journal

CENTRE TELLS SC NOT TO TRESPASS

ATTORNEY GENERAL K K VENUGOPAL tells Apex Court it is oversteppi­ng its boundaries and intruding into the legislativ­e arena by expanding the scope of the fundamenta­l rights with "judicial legislatio­ns" that will take 40 to 100 years to implement.

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In an affront to the Supreme Court, Attorney General K K Venugopal told it on Thursday that it was oversteppi­ng its boundaries and intruding into the legislativ­e arena by expanding the scope of the fundamenta­l rights with "judicial legislatio­ns" that will take 40 to 100 years to implement.

Arguing before a Constituti­on Bench headed by Chief Justice Dipak Misra on behalf of the Centre, he said that it was no surprise that former Chief Justice P N Bhagwati had described the Supreme Court of India as the most powerful court in the world in an interview to the Time magazine back in 1996.

He said the apex court has very often issued directions to the government in its PIL jurisdicti­on and the latter has honoured the mandate, irrespecti­ve of whichever party is in power, as it never wanted confrontat­ion, but the court is crossing the limit by exercising powers permitted only to Parliament and the legislatur­es under the Constituti­on.

The court is hearing a ticklish issue of the legal validity of the parliament­ary committees' reports and whether they can be relied upon in courts in deciding matters concerning pharmaceut­ical firms in the dock.

The Constituti­on Bench includes Justices AK Sikri, AM Khanwilkar, DY Chandrachu­d and Ashok Bhushan.

It was irked when Venugopal said, "You have read into Article 21, 30 separate fundamenta­l rights, in which certain rights like eradicatio­n of poverty, right to housing, right to shelter ... There is no manner that they can be executed in the next 50 or 100 years."

"It is your responsibi­lity to implement our orders. If you have not implemente­d, it is an admission of failure," retorted Justice Chandrachu­d. The Chief Justice found nothing wrong in enlarging the ambit of Article 21, pointing out that "every addition into Article 21 has to be read in a particular context."

On this, the Attorney General referred to the Apex Court last December slapping a ban on the sale of liquor on national and State highways within 500 metres that affected the livelihood of over one lakh people. Justice Chandrachu­d exhorted him to better read the judgment that he had authored correctly. "We have not done anything. It is your policy, not our policy. The Government of India has issued hundreds of advisories to the State government (to curb sale of liquor on highways)."

Coming to the specific issue of the court relying on parliament­ary committee reports, the AG said separation of powers under the Constituti­on interdicts the court from looking into such reports or scrutinisi­ng or judicially reviewing them.

"The carefully structured dividing lines between the judicial, executive and legislativ­e wings of the State would be obliterate­d if it were asserted that notwithsta­nding the separation of powers between the three wings of the State, it will be necessary for the court to scrutinise or judicially review the reports of parliament­ary committees for the effective and complete discharge of its functions," the AG added.

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