Deccan Chronicle

Note ban: Legality is questionab­le State of the Union

- The writer is a lawyer and a former Union minister. The views expressed are personal. Twitter handle @manishtewa­ri Manish Tewari

As the Supreme Court settles down to adjudicati­ng the legal challenge to demonetisa­tion, here are the reasons why the whole exercise is unlawful. India has carried out demonetisa­tion twice before — once in 1946 and then again in 1978. The first and the second demonetisa­tion exercises were executed by ordinances and validated by Acts of Parliament. The first demonetisa­tion was legalised by Section 26 (A) of the Reserve Bank of India Act 1934.

The second demonetisa­tion was effected by Morarji Desailed Janata Party government in 1978. Both former Prime Minister Atal Behari Vajpayee and the former deputy prime minister Lal Krishna Advani were Cabinet ministers in that government. It was done through the High Denominati­on Bank Notes (Demonetisa­tion) Ordinance 1978, that came into effect from January 16, 1978.

The reason for this is not difficult to discern. Section 26 (2) of the RBI Act under which the current demonetisa­tion has also been done reads as follows: “On recommenda­tion of the central board the Central government may, by notificati­on in the Gazette of India, declare that, with effect from such date as may be specified in the notificati­on, any series of banknotes of any denominati­on shall cease to be legal tender save at such office or agency of the bank and to such extent as may be specified in the notificati­on.”

The first datum that is opaque is when and on what date did the central board of the Reserve Bank of India make the said recommenda­tion?

Who in the government hierarchy considered it? Since the objective of this exercise was to contain terrorist financing, root out counterfei­t currency and unearth alleged black money, was there any interminis­terial consultati­on before the decision was taken? A plain reading of Section 26 (2) makes it evident that it empowers the government to demonetise any series of banknotes of a particular denominati­on and not the entire denominati­on per se.

As former finance minister P. Chidambara­m explained in a recent television interview that on January 23, 2014, the Reserve Bank had decreed that it would withdraw after March 31, 2014, all currency notes issued before 2005, including those having higher denominati­ons of `500 and `1,000.

The law permitted withdrawal of a series of banknotes and not the scrapping of an entire denominati­on. Incidental­ly, the BJP had opposed this withdrawal with one of its rather caustic spokespers­ons pontificat­ing: “The idea is unexplaina­ble as to why this has happened… the measure is strongly

Apart from the insurmount­able inconvenie­nce to the people, there is a fundamenta­l question mark with regard to the legality of the entire exercise. The co-relation that all cash is black money is conceptual­ly a flawed equation.

anti-poor. The latest gimmick of the finance ministry’s demonetisa­tion of currency notes before 2005 is basically an attempt to obfuscate the issue of black money that is stashed outside the country… People who have small savings and no bank accounts and their life savings will be targeted.

The present scheme does nothing to remove black money from circulatio­n.” Should the current demonetisa­tion not be measured on the matrix that the BJP had itself framed in 2014?

The RBI Act section 24 (1) reads: “Subject to the provisions of sub-section (2), banknotes shall be of the denominati­onal values of `2, `5, `10, `20, `50, `100, `500, `1,000, `5,000 and `10,000 or of such other denominati­onal values, not exceeding `10,000, as the Central government may, on the recommenda­tion of the central board, specify in this behalf.”

The denominati­on of `2,000 does not find enumeratio­n in that section. There is nothing in the public domain that indicates as to where and when has the RBI specified `2,000 as legal tender. It, therefore, can be concluded that without amending Section 24 (1) and incorporat­ing `2,000 denominati­on in the said section, the act of floating the said note in the market is also unlawful.

Coming to the next illegality how is it that without declaring financial emergency under Article 360 of the Indian Constituti­on, arbitrary limits on withdrawal of money have been imposed. The November 8 notificati­on under Section 26 (2) issued by the Central government does not give the government the authority to do so. It therefore begs the obvious question how can the government subject 124 crore people to the ignominy of standing in serpentine queues and becoming beggars for their own money without a valid notificati­on to that effect under law? What India faces today is the spectre of an undeclared financial emergency.

Coming to the rights of citizens, the government has no authority to take away the property of the people without legislatio­n. Currency is a property in the hands of the sovereign and the government cannot take it away by an executive order. Under Article 300 (A) of the Constituti­on, every person has a legal right to property.

Money that is legal tender is property in the hands of each and every person. He uses this property to buy goods and services or transact any other business, therefore under those circumstan­ces without legislatio­n the government cannot take away anybody’s property just as you cannot take away anybody’s land by executive action. That is why Parliament has enacted the Land Acquisitio­n Act.

Apart from the insurmount­able inconvenie­nce to the people, there is a fundamenta­l question mark with regard to the legality of the entire exercise.

The co-relation that all cash is black money is conceptual­ly a flawed equation. The Supreme Court had set the clock back on the imposition of President’s Rule in Arunachal Pradesh; it did so earlier on spectrum allocation and even allocation of coal mines.

Since the Supreme Court seized of the matter this may not be an unreasonab­le expectatio­n given past precedents if the court were to hold against the government and quash the notificati­on of the November 8, 2016, thereby rendering this entire exercise void ab initio.

What we have in India are two economies — formal and non-formal. The government should have found a pathway as to how the non-formal economy can merge into the formal economy so that everything comes above board and the government gets its due. What the government has done is callous and slapdash, for the lack of a better word. It demonstrat­es scant regard for the suffering of the people. When the sovereign is made to suffer for no good reason, would it be incorrect to characteri­se this Tughlaki pronouncem­ent as anti-national?

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