FrontLine

1973 Kesavanand­a Bharati case

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IN an interview a few years before his passing in 2020, Kesavanand­a Bharati, the pontiff of the Edneer Mutt in Kasaragod in Kerala, said that when he challenged the Kerala Land Reforms Act he never thought that the subsequent Supreme Court judgment (in Kesavanand­a Bharati vs State of Kerala) would become such a landmark event in the annals of the Indian judiciary. “I approached the court not because I lost my property but due to the feeling that what the government did was not right,” he said.

Nonetheles­s, Bharati’s petition led to the Kesavanand­a judgment, which set forth the “basic structure doctrine”. The Supreme Court pronounced on April 24, 1973—by a razor-thin majority of 7:6—that although Parliament had the power to amend any part of the Constituti­on of India, it could not use this power to alter or destroy the “basic structure” of the Constituti­on. Considerin­g the salience of the issue, the Supreme Court had constitute­d a 13-judge bench that heard the case continuous­ly for almost five months to flesh out the relationsh­ip between the three convention­al branches of government. The judgment meant that all constituti­onal amendments made henceforth would have to pass the Supreme Court’s “basic structure filter”.

While the basic structure of the Constituti­on is not defined, Chief Justice S.M. Sikri in his judgment identified what it constitute­d, according to him: the supremacy, the secular character, and the federal character of the Constituti­on; the republican and democratic form of government; and the separation of powers between the legislatur­e, the executive, and the judiciary. The other judges on the bench prepared their own lists of what constitute­d the basic structure of the Constituti­on.

If one were to indulge in a counterfac­tual exercise, it would perhaps not be too fantastica­l to imagine India descending into an authoritar­ian form of governance with even the sanctity of the Constituti­on sacrificed at the altar of untrammell­ed political power if the Kesavanand­a Bharati judgment had allowed

Parliament to amend any part of the Constituti­on.

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