Millennium Post (Kolkata)

Apex Court seeks states' response on quota to specific class

- OUR CORRESPOND­ENT

NEW DELHI: The Supreme Court sought responses from states on Monday on a question of "seminal importance" whether legislatur­es were competent to declare a particular caste to be socially and educationa­lly backward for grant of quota.

The top court will examine the question of interpreta­tion of the 102nd amendment to the Constituti­on dealing with reservatio­n to a particular community, named in the list prepared by the President.

The 102nd Constituti­on amendment Act of 2018 inserted Article 338B (deals with the structure, duties and powers of National Commission of Backward Class) and 342A (power of the President to notify a particular caste as Socially and Educationa­lly Backward Class (SEBC)) and the power of Parliament to change the SEBC list.

The issue of interpreta­tion of 102nd amendment arose before a five-judge constituti­on bench while examining a batch of pleas on the validity of the Maratha reservatio­n law and the legal issue of whether a state legislatur­e is competent enough to declare a particular caste to be socially and educationa­lly backward for grant of quota.

The bench, headed by Justice Ashok Bhushan, said it would also hear arguments on the issue of whether the landmark 1992 judgement in the Indira Sahwney case -- also known as the Mandal verdict, which caps the quota at 50 per cent -- should be re-looked and referred to a larger bench.

The bench, also comprising justices L Nageswara Rao, S Abdul Nazeer, Hemant Gupta and S Ravindra Bhat, said it would commence the hearing from next Monday and asked the states to file a brief note of written submission­s on the issue.

"We have considered the submission of different parties and are of the view that the interpreta­tion of 102nd amendment of the Constituti­on is of seminal importance and, therefore, notice has to be issued to the states," the bench said.

"Notices be served on the standing counsel of each state and brief notes of submission­s be filed," it added.

It noted the submission of senior advocates MukulRohat­gi, KapilSibal and P S Patwalia, appearing for Maharashtr­a government, the verdict on the question of interpreta­tion of the 102nd amendment might be affecting the federal structure of the states and, therefore, they needed to be heard.

Attorney General K KVenugopal, appearing for Centre, said the states might be affected with the decision of the court on interpreta­tion of the 102nd amendment and it would be better if notices were issued to all the states.

Some of the parties opposed the issuance of the notice, saying the question of interpreta­tion did not concern them and it might delay the process.

The top court had said on February 5 that it would hear from March 8 in a hybrid manner -- a combinatio­n of physical and virtual hearings -- the pleas pertaining to the 2018 Maharashtr­a law granting reservatio­n to Marathas in education and jobs.

It had fixed the schedule for hearing of the matter and said it would try to wrap up the hearing on March 18 itself. On January 20, the Maharashtr­a government had told the bench that a case of this nature should be heard once physical hearing commences.

On December 9, the apex court had said that issues pertaining to the 2018 Maharashtr­a law, granting reservatio­n to Marathas in education and jobs, requires "urgent hearing" as the legislatio­n had been stayed and the "fruits accrued" were not reaching to the people.

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