Hindustan Times (Ranchi)

Centre backs verdict protecting lawmakers from prosecutio­n if they accept cash for vote in House

SUPREME COURT WAS HEARING A REFERENCE TO EXAMINE THE CORRECTNES­S OF THE RULING IN THE 1998 JUDGMENT

- Utkarsh Anand letters@hindustant­imes.com

NEW DELHI: Calling it a “constituti­onally correct” principle, the Union government on Tuesday backed in the Supreme Court a 1998 ruling that shields MPs and MLAs from prosecutio­n if they accept bribes in lieu of their votes in Parliament or state assemblies.

Arguing before a Constituti­on bench led by justice SA Nazeer, the Centre opposed a reconsider­ation of the 1998 judgment in the PV Narasimha Rao (JMM bribery) case on the grounds that even the gross facts of a case will not justify taking away the immunity granted to legislator­s under the Constituti­on for their acts on the floor of the House.

Solicitor general (SG) Tushar Mehta, representi­ng the Centre, submitted that the majority view of three judges on the five-judge bench in the 1998 verdict is the correct view, requiring no re-look at the provisions of immunity accorded to legislator­s.

Article 105(2) of the Constituti­on states that no MP shall be liable to any proceeding­s in any court in respect of anything said or any vote given by him in parliament or any committee thereof. A similar provision exists for MLAs under Article 194(2).

“We are accepting the Narasimha Rao judgment... we are saying the immunity cannot be diluted just because facts of one particular case is gross or peculiar,” the SG told the bench, which also included justices BR Gavai, AS Bopanna, V Ramasubram­anian, and BV Nagarathna.

The court was hearing a reference to examine the correctnes­s of the majority ruling in the 1998 judgment in providing absolute immunity to legislator­s from prosecutio­n for bribery. By 3-2, the Supreme Court in the Narasimha Rao case held that MPs and MLAs were screened from prosecutio­n in such cases since the alleged kickbacks were in respect of a parliament­ary vote, which is guarded by parliament­ary immunity under relevant constituti­onal provisions.

However, in 2014, the Jharkhand high court drew a fine distinctio­n and held that parliament­ary immunity from prosecutio­n will not protect a legislator who accepts a bribe to vote in a certain manner, and does not vote in that manner. The high court order came while rejecting a petition by Sita Soren, a member of the Jharkhand Mukti Morcha (JMM), who allegedly accepted a bribe to vote for a particular candidate in the Rajya Sabha elections of 2012 but did not do so.

Subsequent­ly, Soren challenged the high court judgment in the top court, pressing that she is entitled to absolute immunity as per the 1998 verdict. However, in March 2019, a three-judge bench noted that since the issues involve “substantia­l public importance” with “wide ramificati­ons”, it should be heard by a five-judge bench, congruent in strength to the Rao case.

On Tuesday, Mehta opened arguments stating that he supports the majority view of the 1998 ruling and that the matter should be sent back to a bench of two or three judges. “On the facts of this case, we oppose the petition, but on the matter of constituti­onal principle, we support the 1998 judgment,” he added.

On his part, senior advocate Raju Ramachandr­an, representi­ng Soren, also relied on the 1998 judgment and found fault with the high court judgment in paving way for his client’s prosecutio­n.

At this point, the bench quipped: “So, it’s a case of cash outside the House and conscience inside the House... and you were held guilty of breach of contract. Had you carried out the specific performanc­e, you would have been entitled to the relief.”

On Mehta’s request to refer it back to a smaller bench, the Constituti­on bench said that it would have to examine the preliminar­y issue after the reference.

However, since both the government and the petitioner were on the same side, the court proceeded to appoint senior counsel PS Patwalia and advocate Gaurav Agrawal as amicus curiae to assist it. It fixed the matter for December 6 to decide whether the previous judgment needs a review.

The Constituti­on bench judgment in 1998 came after criminal prosecutio­ns were sought to be launched in the wake of 10 MPs belonging to the JMM and the Janata Dal casting their votes to defeat a no-confidence motion moved in the Lok Sabha against the PV Narasimha Rao government in 1993.

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